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  2. Fish gill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_gill

    The shared trait of breathing via gills in bony fish and cartilaginous fish is a famous example of symplesiomorphy. Bony fish are more closely related to terrestrial vertebrates , which evolved out of a clade of bony fishes that breathe through their skin or lungs, than they are to the sharks, rays, and the other cartilaginous fish.

  3. Aquatic respiration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_respiration

    Each gill arch has two rows (hemibranchs) of gill filaments; Each gill filament has many lamellae; In osteichthyes, the gills contain 4 gill arches on each side of the head, two on each side for chondrichthyes or seven gill baskets on each side of the fish's head in lampreys. In fish, the long bony cover for the gill (the operculum) can be used ...

  4. Gill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gill

    Gills or gill-like organs, located in different parts of the body, are found in various groups of aquatic animals, including mollusks, crustaceans, insects, fish, and amphibians. Semiterrestrial marine animals such as crabs and mudskippers have gill chambers in which they store water, enabling them to use the dissolved oxygen when they are on land.

  5. Fish physiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_physiology

    It then pumps it over gills so oxygen enters the bloodstream, and allows oxygen-depleted water to exit through the gill slits (right) In bony fish, the gills lie in a branchial chamber covered by a bony operculum. The great majority of bony fish species have five pairs of gills, although a few have lost some over the course of evolution.

  6. Spiracle (vertebrates) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiracle_(vertebrates)

    Chimaeras lack spiracles, using gill opercula for buccal pumping instead. [8] Bony fish have similar gill opercula, but the basalmost ray-finned fish, bichirs, use their spiracles for inhaling air into their lungs; this leads to speculation this may be the original air breathing mechanism ancestral to all bony fish and tetrapods. [9]

  7. Branchial arch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branchial_arch

    Gill arches supporting the gills in a pike. Branchial arches or gill arches are a series of paired bony/cartilaginous "loops" behind the throat (pharyngeal cavity) of fish, which support the fish gills. As chordates, all vertebrate embryos develop pharyngeal arches, though the eventual fate of these arches varies between taxa.

  8. Operculum (fish) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operculum_(fish)

    The suboperculum is rectangular in shape in most bony fish and is located ventral to the preoperculum and operculum components. It is the thinnest bone segment out of the opercular series and is located directly above the gills. The interoperculum is triangular shaped and borders the suboperculum posterodorsally and the preoperculum anterodorsally.

  9. Anabantoidei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anabantoidei

    The labyrinth organs, a defining characteristic of fish in the suborder Anabantoidei, is a much-folded suprabranchial accessory breathing organ.It is formed by vascularized expansion of the epibranchial bone of the first gill arch and used for respiration in air.