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Polypterus

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Polypterus

 

a genus of fishes of the superorder Polypteri. The body is elongated (up to 120 cm long) and slightly laterally compressed. The pectoral fins have a fleshy lobe at their base; the dorsal fin consists of a number of small fins, each of which has a rigid anterior ray. The ventral fins are placed far to the rear. The body is covered with ganoid scales. The swim bladder is double and alveolate; it opens ventrally and acts as a lung. The fishes rise to the surface for air. If they are deprived of atmospheric air, they die within two or three hours; however, they cannot live outside the water.

There are ten species of Polypterus, inhabiting the quiet back-waters of rivers and lake lagoons in Africa. They feed on small fish and invertebrates. The fishes spawn from July to September (during the rainy season); the roe are small (up to 1–3 mm) and strongly pigmented. Larvae with external gills emerge from the roe. Polypterus is of minor commercial value. The flesh is tasty. Some species are kept in aquariums.

REFERENCES

Nikol’skii, G. V. Chastnaia ikhtiologiia, 3rd ed. Moscow, 1971.
Zhiznzhivotnykh, vol. 4, part 1. Moscow, 1971.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Scientists are studying the scales of the freshwater fish, polypterus senegalus, in the hope of learning engineering lessons that can be put to practical use.
The first species to have a structured larynx are the polypterus (or lungfish).
Evolution of the feeding mechanism in primitive actinopterygian fishes: A functional anatomic analysis of Polypterus, Lepisosteus, and Amia.
Evolution of feeding mechanisms in primitive actinopterygian fishes: a functional analysis of Polypterus, Lepisosteus, and Amia.
The pattern of skull sutures in Acanthostega doesn't match the one found in Polypterus, a modern fish that, like most fish today, captures its prey by slurping it in (SN: 4/24/04, p.
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