Physical World/Fish
| Hammerhead shark 
 family Sphyrnidae 
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| Wobbegong 
 family Orectolobidae 
 Name given to the 12 species of carpet sharks Wobbegongs spend much of their time resting on the sea floor. They are well camouflaged with a symmetrical pattern of bold markings which resembles a carpet | |
| Whale shark 
 Rhincodon typus 
 Their skin is marked with pale yellow spots and stripes which are unique to each individual | |
| Basking shark 
 Cetorhinus maximus The second largest fish, after the whale shark. It is found in all the world's temperate oceans, and is a slow moving and generally harmless filter feeder. Known for its greatly enlarged mouth | |
| Thresher shark 
 genus Alopias 
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| Stingray 
 suborder Myliobatoidei Most stingrays have one or more barbed stingers on the tail, which are used exclusively in self-defence. Fatal stings are very rare, but can happen, most famously in the death of Steve Irwin in 2006 | |
| Manta ray 
 genus Manta 
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| Moray eel 
 family Muraenidae Moray eels are the only animals that use pharyngeal jaws (a second set of jaws) to actively capture and restrain prey. Most species lack pectoral and pelvic fins | |
| Electric eel 
 Electrophorus electricus 
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| Giant oarfish 
 Regalecus glesne 
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| Ocean sunfish 
 Mola mola The world's heaviest bony fish, it can weigh up to 1000 kg. Sunfish can be as tall as they are long when their dorsal and ventral fins are extended | |
| Sailfish 
 genus Istiophorus 
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| Swordfish 
 Xiphias gladius 
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| Barracuda 
 genus Sphyraena 
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| Grouper 
 subfamily Epinephelinae Groupers are teleosts, typically having a stout body and a large mouth. They are mostly protogynous hermaphrodites, i.e. they mature only as females and have the ability to change sex after sexual maturity | |
| Tarpon 
 genus Megalops 
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| Anglerfish 
 order Lophiiformes They are bony fishes named for their characteristic mode of predation, in which a fleshy growth from the fish's head (the esca or illicium) acts as a lure. Some deep-sea anglerfish emit light from their escae to attract prey | |
| Archerfish 
 Family Toxotidae Known for their habit of preying on land-based insects and other small animals by shooting them down with water droplets from their specialized mouths | |
| Pufferfish 
 Family Tetraodontidae 
 Generally believed to be the second-most poisonous vertebrates in the world, after the golden poison frog. The meat of some species is considered a delicacy in Japan (as fugu) Pufferfish can fill its extremely elastic stomach with water until it is much larger and almost spherical in shape | |
| Ocellaris  clownfish 
 Amphiprion ocellaris 
 The main character in Finding Nemo is an A. ocellaris | |
| Candiru 
 Also known as the toothpick fish. a species of parasitic freshwater catfish native to the Amazon Basin It is attracted to blood and urine, and will (rarely) enter the body by swimming up the penis. It can only be removed by surgery | |
| Coelacanth 
 
 Two species – West Indian Ocean coelacanth, and Indonesian coelacanth | |
| Seahorse 
 genus Hippocampus (from Greek for "horse" and "sea monster") 
 Fertilised eggs grow in the male’s brood pouch Seahorses rise by expelling water from a swim bladder | |
| Lamprey 
 order Petromyzontiformes 
 Jawless fish also known as lamprey eels The adult is characterised by a toothed, funnel-like sucking mouth. Lampreys are well known for those species which bore into the flesh of other fish to suck their blood | |
| Lungfish 
 subclass Dipnoi 
 Also known as salamanderfish Freshwater fish. Lungfish have the ability to breathe air. All lungfish have two lungs, with the exception of the Australian lungfish, which only has one | |
| Hagfish 
 class Myxini Eel-shaped, slime-producing marine fish (also called slime eels). They are the only known living animals that have a skull but no vertebral column. Along with lampreys, hagfish are jawless | 
