Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Lungfish
For the musical band, see Lungfish (band).
see text Lungfishes are sarcopterygian fish that can breathe air (and in some species are obligate air-breathers), and have limb-like appendages instead of fins. There are six living species known; four in Africa, and one each in South America and Australia.
They all have an elongate body, four limbs, and a single rear fin.
Taxonomy
Taxonomy of lungfishes presents some difficulty because of their resemblances to both fish and land-dwelling vertebrates, and have been classified in a variety of ways, ranging from class Dipnoi, to infraclass Dipnomorpha, to order Dipteriformes. However, there is general agreement that there are two main subcategories, here given as orders:
- Ceratodontiformes: characterized by having broad flipper-like fins and an unpaired lung.
- Family Ceratodontidae,
- Genus Neoceratodus
- Neoceratodus forsteri - Queensland Lungfish
- Genus Neoceratodus
- Family Ceratodontidae,
- Lepidosireniformes: characterized by having thread-like fins and paired lungs.
- Family Lepidosirenidae
- Genus Lepidosiren
- Lepidosiren paradoxa - South American Lungfish
- Genus Lepidosiren
- Family Protopteridae
- Genus Protopterus
- Protopterus aethiopicus - Marbled Lungfish
- Protopterus amphibius - East African Lungfish
- Protopterus annectens - African Lungfish
- Protopterus dolloi - Slender Lungfish
- Genus Protopterus
- Family Lepidosirenidae
10-26-2009 08:16:03
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


