Fish Of Tropical Africa
Fish are animals which live entirely
in water. Their shape, which is long and tapering both at head and tail, is best suited for swimming, and so is their body-covering of slippery scales. Instead of
four legs for walking they have four fins for swimming, arranged two in front and
two behind and working as paddles. The tail is also a large fin and acts as a rudder
to guide the fish and as a strong extra paddle. In addition, there are
usually one
or two fins along the middle of the back and a small single one underneath. Fish
feed on smaller living things in the water, and have a stomach storehouse and a blood circulation to carry the nourishment to all parts of the body. But the blood
of fish is cold and not warm as in mammals and birds. Water contains a great deal
of air dissolved in it, just as sugar will dissolve. When water is heated the dissolved
air comes off it as bubbles. It is this air that fishes have to breathe, and for
this they are provided with special arrangements f
or breathing called "gills"; these do the same work that lungs
do in other animals. Gills are large slits in the fishes' necks with feather-like
folds of skin projecting into each slit. These feathery folds of skin are full of
blood-vessel. The water passes into the mouth and out through the gill slits, and
the air in the water is taken up by the blood-vessels in the gills. The fish air
purifies the blood and the impure air is carried away by the water flowing through
the gills. In most fishes there are four pairs of gills, but in the sharks there
are five or six, and the same in the mud-fish. In the matter of breathing the mud-fishes
are very interesting, As they come to the surface to breathe and are provided with
small lungs as well as with gills.