Coelacanth - Wikipedia Coelacanths are a part of Sarcopterygii or the lobe-finned fishes, the same clade as the lungfish and tetrapods, and they all possess lobed fins as opposed to rayed fins
Coelacanth | Description, Habitat, Discovery, Facts | Britannica Coelacanth, any of the two living lobe-finned bony fishes of the genus Latimeria Order Coelacanthiformes, to which all coelacanths belong, was thought to have died out about 66 million years ago, until a coelacanth was caught in 1938
Coelacanth | Smithsonian Ocean The coelacanth is a "passive drift feeder," moving slowly and passively near the substrate where it feeds primarily on cephalopods (cuttlefish, squid, and octopus) and fish
Coelacanths: The fish that ‘outdid’ the Loch Ness Monster Coelacanths were thought to have been extinct for 70 million years until one was found alive in 1938 What on Earth? The unexpected capture of a living coelacanth in the 1930s was “the most sensational natural history discovery” of the century
240-Million-Year-Old Coelacanth May Have Used Lungs to Hear Underwater 240-Million-Year-Old Coelacanth May Have Used Lungs to Hear Underwater Learn how fossils and high-resolution imaging revealed that some Triassic fish may have used a lung-like organ to detect sound underwater — and what that suggests about early vertebrate senses
Coelacanth - Description, Habitat, Image, Diet, and Interesting Facts The Coelacanth (pronounced SEE-la-kanth) is not just any fish; it is a marvel of biological tenacity Belonging to the order Coelacanthiformes, these remarkable animals are the last surviving members of a lineage that thrived during the Devonian period, over 400 million years ago
Coelacanth - New World Encyclopedia Coelacanths are lobe-finned fish with the pectoral and anal fins on fleshy stalks supported by bones, and the tail or caudal fin is divided into three lobes, the middle one of which also includes a continuation of the notochord
Coelacanth: the Living Fossil - ThoughtCo You'd think it would be hard to miss a six-foot-long, 200-pound fish, but the discovery of a live Coelacanth in 1938 caused an international sensation Discover 10 fascinating Coelacanth facts, ranging from when this fish supposedly went extinct to how the females of the genus give birth to live young
What is a coelacanth? - BBC Science Focus Magazine For years, scientists thought it died out with the dinosaurs The only known coelacanths were fossils Then in 1938, a South African museum curator found a dead one in a fisherman’s catch Live specimens were later caught,provingthat this curious fishwas never actually extinct