lungfish

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lungfish

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

lungfish common name for any of a group of fish belonging to the families Ceratodontidae and Lepidosirenidae, found in the rivers of South America, Africa, and Australia. Like the lobefins, the lungfishes are ancestrally related to the four-footed land animals. Fossil lungfish have been found in the United States, Europe, and India. Of the living specimens, the most primitive is an Australian species, a stout-bodied 5-ft (150-cm) fish with paired fins set on short stumps. The function of its lungs is not clearly understood. The fins of other lungfishes have become long, wispy sense organs. They are in general more eellike in appearance. Best-known are the African species, which hibernate in hard clay balls during the dry season. They line their retreat with a waterproof membrane of dried mucus and apply their mouths to tubes of this material that serve as airshafts from the cocoons to the surface of the ground. They can remain dormant in this manner for up to three years. In water, the African lungfishes breathe with gills. The South American loalach is totally dependent on air and will drown if held underwater. Its eggs are laid in a long tunnel at the bottom of a swamp and are guarded by the male, which sprouts red filamental gills from his pelvic fins. The young are also equipped with temporary external gills. Lungfish feed on snails and plants, storing quantities of fat for sustenance during hibernation. Lungfish are classified in the phylum Chordata , subphylum Vertebrata, class Osteichthyes, order Dipteriformes, families Ceratodontidae and Lepidosirenidae.

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lungfish

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

lungfish Elongated fish from which the first amphibians developed, found in shallow freshwater and swamps in Africa, South America, and Australia. It has primitive lungs, and, during a dry season, the various species can breath air or survive total dehydration by burrowing into the mud and enveloping themselves in a mucous cocoon. Order Dipnoi.

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lungfish

The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English | 2009 | © The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 2009, originally published by Oxford University Press 2009. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

lung·fish / ˈləngˌfish/ • n. (pl. same or -fishes) an elongated freshwater fish (families Ceratodontidae, Lepidosirenidae, and Protopteridae) with one or two sacs that function as lungs, enabling it to breathe air. It can estivate in mud for long periods to survive drought.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article THE LUNGFISH FATHER.(Poem)
Magazine article from: Quadrant; 10/1/2000
Free Article The missing link?(Life & fish: chronicles of the weird and wondrous)
Magazine article from: National Fisherman; 4/1/2004
Free Article Evolution Song.(Poem)
Magazine article from: Poetry; 9/1/2005

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THE LUNGFISH FATHER.(Poem)
Magazine article from: Quadrant; 10/1/2000; ; 159 words ; I wish you could regress and become a lungfish, burrow underground during the dry season, pushing up through...red as they branch into an extra breathing organ, so that the lungfish father can bring oxygen to his eggs in the nest he alone prepares... Read more
The missing link?(Life & fish: chronicles of the weird and wondrous)
Magazine article from: National Fisherman; 4/1/2004; 83 words ; Officials at San Francisco's Steinhart Aquarium honor an Australian lungfish as the oldest fish in captivity. Methuselah, as the fish is...aquarium staff for not over-feeding him throughout 65 years!) Lungfish are described as eel-like and are rare even in their native... Read more
Evolution Song.(Poem)
Magazine article from: Poetry; 9/1/2005; ; 80 words ; Evolution Song The poison frog becomes the poison arrow From a tadpole comes a toad To the lungfish comes the land we're on From the city comes the road A milk thief once made butterfly A moth once lived in silk The mayfly lives... Read more
Zoos look to the future: zoos may seem to be all about admiring the animals, but more often than not they also have humane objectives like furthering breeding programmes for endangered species and educating children to respect the natural world around them.(OUT-N-ABOUT)
Magazine article from: Swiss News; 5/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...the dozens of species of colourful and strange-looking fish, and of these, perhaps none is more bizarre than the Australian Lungfish--coming this summer--whose fins are actually limb-like. Jermann says his greatest source of pride is teaching the children... Read more
Fish respiration and environment.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: SciTech Book News; 12/1/2007; 128 words ; ...development of the mudskipper, osmoregulatory and respiratory adaptations of Lake Magadi fish, blood gases of the South American lungfish, and gill diseases. The editors are professors in Brazil and India. Distributed in the U.S. by Enfield. ([c]20072005 Book News... Read more
Wild berries.
Magazine article from: National Review; 12/14/1984; ; 700+ words ; ...his best and Irving Wallace at his normal worst. Strange, vexed, wondrous thing: less secure about its true environment than lungfish once were: weirder than a Women of Gulag pictorial in Playboy. There is swivel-gun cinematic plotting (from space to Siberia... Read more
Fish endocrinology; 2v.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: SciTech Book News; 9/1/2006; 214 words ; ...gastro-entero-pancreatic (GEP) system researchers describe new techniques to examine the endocrine pancreas of the African lungfish, glucagon and related compounds and the development of the GEP system of teleosts; in pituitary development, hormones and functions... Read more
Archer in the Marrow: the Applewood Cycles, 1967-1987.
Magazine article from: National Review; 2/5/1988; ; 700+ words ; ...a dialogue among three personae: Father, Son, and You. The scene shifts from Land's End to Gethsemane; characters include a lungfish avatar of You and a voluble potato. Were it not for Viereck's taut prosody and jazzy diction, Archer would be incomprehensible... Read more
Letters in the Editor's Mailbag.(Letters)(Letter to the Editor)
Newspaper article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR); 7/21/2002; 700+ words ; ...the amazing abilities to walk on its fins and survive out of water for up to three days. Between this little critter and the lungfish, some creationists are going to have to change their way of thinking - assuming, of course, that they do think at all. RICHARD... Read more
Recurrent laryngeal nerve paralysis: Current concepts and treatment: Part I--Phylogenesis and physiology.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Ear, Nose and Throat Journal; 11/1/2000; ; 700+ words ; ...atmosphere to live on land. The branchial apparatus disappears. The first species to have a structured larynx are the polypterus (or lungfish). Their larynx has a rigid fibrous structure and a dilator muscle in addition to a constrictor muscle. This laryngeal structure... Read more
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lungfish. (Image by Hanno, GFDL)

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