Biology, asked by rakshithmanjunath45, 18 days ago

explain locomotion of fish​

Answers

Answered by roygupta2021
2

Answer:

Locomotion is termed as movement of any living creature by their locomotory organs.

Explanation:

Usually fishes have fins and with the help of fins they move forward and they swim, Some fishes even walk, we can see crabs burrowing inside the sand on the beaches. They use their pectoral fins to push the water and try to swim.

Answered by ankitpatle0
0
  • Fish locomotion refers to a variety of animal movement methods, the most frequent of which being swimming.
  • Fish use a number of water-based propulsion methods to do this, the most frequent of which include wavelike motions of the fish's body and tail, as well as fin movements in some specialised fish.
  • Anguilliform movement occurs when a wave flows uniformly over a long, narrow body; sub-carangiform locomotion occurs when the wave increases rapidly in amplitude towards the tail.
  • The wave is focused at the tail, which oscillates fast, making it carangiform.
  • thunniform, fast-swimming creature with a big, muscular crescent-shaped tail
  • and ostraciiform, with only minor oscillations Fish with a greater level of specialisation are capable of moving independently.
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