Results 1 - 9 from 9 for cartilaginous skeleton in 0.261 sec.
Florida Museum of Natural History Ichthyology Department
... incidence of tumors among the bony fishes, the frequency of tumors found among the cartilaginous fishes is impressively low and has been documented in two classic review articles ... enterprising food supplement marketers, who claim that "…sharks don't get cancer" because their cartilaginous skeleton contains factors that inhibit cancer by preventing blood vessels from spreading to developing tumor ...
www.flmnh.ufl.edu
The Pelagic Shark Research Foundation - Biology
One major difference is that all sharks and rays (elasmobranchs) posess a cartilaginous skeleton as opposed to one composed of calcareous bone like that of goldfish, tunas, and most ...
www.pelagic.org
Champ of Lake Champlain
Its single dorsal fin, running along its spine, would match ...
lclt.org
The Wonders of the Seas: Sharks
Chondrichthyes (meaning "cartilage-fish"). Sharks and other cartilaginous fishes (rays, skates, and ratfishes) differ from the bony fishes in that they have a cartilaginous skeleton, and lack a swim bladder. This class of ...
oceanicresearch.org
Sharks and How They Live - Script
This makes their bodies very flexible. Fish with cartilaginous skeletons are grouped together in a special class which also includes the skates and rays, close relatives of the sharks. All of these cartilaginous fishes have another ...
oceanicresearch.org
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Herpetology General Information
Herpetology "These foul and loathsome animals are abhorrent because of their cold body, pale color, cartilaginous skeleton, filthy skin, fierce aspect, calculating eye, offensive smell, harsh voice, squalid habitation, and terrible venom ...
www.inhs.uiuc.edu
Glossary
Elasmobranch – fish with a cartilaginous, non-bony skeleton (sharks, skates and rays). Ephemeral- Being present only briefly, as in naturally occurring ... species which are primarily sought in a fishery. Teleost – fish with a bony skeleton as opposed to cartilaginous fish (elasmobranchs). Total Allowable Catch (TAC) – maximum tonnage, set each year, ...
fishonline.org
Endangered Species International
International About Us Our Projects Support Us Endangered Species Fish Hagfish Lampreys and Cartilaginous-skeleton fishes Sharks, skates, rays, and ratfishes Bony and Ray-finned fishes Fish Decline ... three different classes. These included the jawless hagfish and lampreys (Class Agnatha), the cartilaginous sharks and rays (Class Chondrichthyes), and the boney fish (Class Osteichthyes), but Class ...
endangeredspeciesinternational.org
Endangered Species International
About Us Our Projects Support Us Endangered Species Fish Hagfish Lampreys and Cartilaginous-skeleton fishes Sharks, skates, rays, and ratfishes Bony and Ray-finned fishes Fish ... more information on lampreys click here Cartilaginous-skeleton fishes (Clade Gnathostomata, Class Chondrichthyes) Cartilaginous-skeleton fishes do not have any true bone. Instead, their skeleton is made of cartilage. They ...
endangeredspeciesinternational.org
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