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- Fish (5349 bytes)
1: ...herring]], ''Clupea harengus'', the most abundant fish species in the world.]]
2: ...out the animals. For other meanings, please see [[Fish (disambiguation)]].''
3: ...sh)|ray]]s), with the remainder classed as [[bony fish]] (class [[Osteichthyes]]).
5: ...as [[jellyfish]] and [[cuttlefish]], are not true fish.
7: ...s). The degree of endothermy varies from the billfish, which warm only their eyes and brain, to [[bluef... - Bass Fish (1359 bytes)
3: ...hared by many different species of popular game [[fish]].
9: ... recreational fishing products and instruct other fishermen on how to catch bass. - Discus Fish (4433 bytes)
2: {{Taxobox_image | image = [[Image:Discus fish.jpg|200px|Symphysodon aequifasciatus|]] | caption...
3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
10: {{Taxobox_end_placement}}
11: {{Taxobox_section_subdivision | color = pink | plural_taxon = Species}}
15: '''Discus''' are freshwater [[perciform]] [[fish]], peculiar [[cichlidae|cichlid]]s native to the ... - Sawfish (fish) (7208 bytes)
1: {{Taxobox_begin | color = pink | name = Sawfish}}<br />{{StatusEndangered}}
2: ...h-plate.jpg|200px]] | caption = Sketching of a Sawfish}}
3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = pink}}
9: {{Taxobox_end_placement}}
10: {{Taxobox_section_subdivision | color = pink | plural_taxon = Species}}
Page text matches
- Jacques Cartier (8139 bytes)
3: ...tember 1]] [[1557]]) was a French [[Exploration|explorer]] who is popularly thought of as one of the m...
9: ...may be considered one of the most conscientious explorers of the period.
13: ...at present day [[Gaspé|Gaspé, Quebec]] where he planted a cross and claimed the territory for France...
19: ...fort, stacking firewood and salting down game and fish.
35: ...den and seeds of cabbage, turnip and lettuce were planted. A fortified settlement was thus created wh... - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
5: ... years in the affluent New York suburb of [[White Plains]]. In [[1902]], she married William Sanger. A...
9: ...m William Sanger. In 1916, Sanger opened a family planning and birth control clinic in the Brownsville...
15: ...he time, the largest private international family planning organization.
19: ...ion, which legalized birth control for married couples in the US. It was the apex of her fifty-year st...
24: ...sence of regulations requiring registration of people diagnosed with venereal diseases (which she cont... - Gloria Steinem (3728 bytes)
5: ...e United States, buying and selling. The family split in [[1944]], and Gloria went to live with her m...
9: ... her infamous undercover expose in working as a [[Playboy bunny]].
21: ...never forget about how much is still left to accomplish.
23: ...a]]. She became a newlywed at an age when most people start retirement—on [[September 3]], [[200...
25: ... [[Irina Dunn]]: "A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle." - Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
7: ...d [[Parthenope]] for the old city that is now [[Naples]]). A brilliant and strong-willed woman, Floren...
23: ...mily objections concerning the risks and social implications of such activity, and the [[Roman Cathol...
31: ...cial indifference. [[Medicine]]s were in short supply, [[hygiene]] was being neglected, and mass [[inf...
35: ...ted to have escaped serious injury when it was toppled in an accident. Following this episode she used...
47: ...statistical reports and was instrumental in the implementation of its recommendations. - Alanis Morissette (25762 bytes)
29: ...'You said, "Yes, I'd like to know what kind of people''
36: ...sequent singles "Feel Your Love", "Walkaway" and "Plastic" were also modest hits.
61: ...ics completely from personal experiences. For example, as Morissette began meeting with record labels,...
66: :''And then played golf for awhile''
67: :''Your shake is like a fish'' - Julia Child (8199 bytes)
1: ...hild.jpg|frame|right|Julia Child holds up a [[Monkfish]].]]
10: ... to fine cuisine. She learned to cook in order to please him and entertain their large social circle. ...
14: ...r first meal in [[Rouen]] of [[oyster]]s, [[sole (fish) | sole]] meuni貥, and fine wine as a culinary r...
28:
34: ...rs during a series of [[stroke]]s in 1989. The couple did not have children. - Sophia Loren (9622 bytes)
5: ...ew up in poverty in wartime [[Pozzuoli]] near [[Naples]].
7: Loren began her film career in the early 1950s playing bit parts in mostly minor Italian films, but...
9: ...ized her voluptuous physique (she even appeared topless in the films ''[[Two Nights with Cleopatra]]''...
11: ...hony Perkins]] (based upon the [[Eugene O'Neill]] play), ''[[Houseboat (movie)|Houseboat]]'' (a romant...
15: ...''[[Lady L]]'' with [[Paul Newman]], [[Charles Chaplin]]'s final film, ''[[A Countess from Hong Kong]]... - Circulatory system (8794 bytes)
18: ...ertebrate]]s, as well as of [[annelid]]s (for example, [[earthworm]]s) and [[cephalopod]]s ([[squid]]s...
20: ... three-chambered heart. Birds and mammals show complete separation of the heart into two pumps, for a ...
22: All circulatory systems frequently employ [[countercurrent exchange]] systems to drive th...
25: An example of an animal with no circulatory system is the f...
30: ...e where the exchange of nutrients and gases takes place between the [[red blood cell]]s and the body t... - Immune system (14564 bytes)
6: ...[[mammal]]s) have immune systems of increasing complexity.
13: ...The [[mannan-binding lectin pathway]] of the [[complement system]], for instance, recognizes [[mannose...
15: ...s virally infected by reading the [[peptide]]s displayed on its MHC molecules. During their developmen...
18: ...nce of [[chondrichthyes]] (cartilaginous or jawed fish).
23: ...s that recognize a broad spectrum of pathogens. [[Plant]]s and many lower animals do not possess an ad... - Brain (22060 bytes)
5: ...n neurons. The [[human brain]] is particularly complex and enlarged.
9: ...y [[complex]] brains: the [[arthropod]]s (for example, [[insect]]s and [[crustacean]]s), the [[cephalo...
11: ... known as [[allocortex]] (Martin, 1996). More complex vertebrates like mammals have developed six-lay...
25: ...the brain. [[Artificial intelligence]] seeks to replicate brain function (although not necessarily bra...
30: ...rimental) artificial vision for deaf and blind people, and [[brain pacemaker]]s are now common to regu... - Eye (21834 bytes)
1: ...ular vision]]), as in [[human]]s; or on different planes producing two separate "images" ([[monocular ...
11: ...ple facets which give a pixelated image (not multiple images as is often believed). Each sensor has it...
15: Some of the simplest eyes, called [[ocelli]], can be found in anima...
16: Jumping spiders have simple eyes that are so large, supported by an array of...
22: The structure of the mammalian eye owes itself completely to the task of focusing [[light]] onto the [... - Heart (10132 bytes)
15: ...ry artery]]. In the lungs gaseous exchange takes places and the blood releases [[carbon dioxide]] int...
23: The blood supply to the heart itself is supplied by the left and right ''coronary arteries'', w...
28: ...trial systole'', ''ventricular systole'' and ''complete cardiac diastole.'' The atrial systole consist...
30: ...and ''aortic semilunar valves'' close. Finally complete cardiac diastole involves relaxation of the at...
39: ...Coronary heart disease]] is the lack of oxygen supply to the heart muscle; it can cause severe pain an... - Liver (11441 bytes)
1: ...uding detoxification, [[glycogen]] storage and [[plasma protein]] synthesis. It also produces [[bile]...
7: The liver is supplied by two major blood vessels: the [[hepatic arte...
23: ... secondary and tertiary branching of the blood supply. The segments corresponding to the surface anat...
42: ===Fetal blood supply===
43: ...d thence to the [[inferior vena cava]], allowing placental blood to bypass the liver. - Lung (7057 bytes)
22: ...lled the [[pleural cavity]] that is filled with [[pleural fluid]]; this allows the inner and outer lay...
26: [[Bird]]s have a complex but highly efficient crosscurrent exchange syst...
28: ...ch control air flow through the lungs, but do not play a direct role in gas exchange. They have a flow...
30: ...rough the trachea and into the atmosphere. Two complete cycles of inhalation and exhalation are, there...
34: The purpose of this complex system of air sacs is to ensure that the airflo... - Rib (1848 bytes)
6: ...is can easily be seen in the [[herring]]. Not all fish have the full set.
8: ...f the 7th neck vertebra on one or both sides is replaced by a free extra rib called a ''cervical rib''... - Parasite (2795 bytes)
9: == Examples ==
12: ** Plants
16: *** [[Candiru]] (Vampire fish of Brazil)
25: ...* [[Malaria]] (a common blood disease caused by [[plasmodium]])
30: ... that live on but not within their hosts, for example, attached to their skin) - Symbiosis (4279 bytes)
1: [[Image:Sea_anemone_ak.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Clownfish in their magnificent sea anemone home.]]
3: ...symbiont''' (alternately, '''symbiote''', and the plural is '''symbionts''' or '''symbiotes'''). When...
15: ...rom its predators (a special mucus on the anemone fish protects it from the stinging tentacles).
17: ...with_shrimp.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Some [[goby|goby fish]] species live in symbiosis with a [[shrimp]].]]
18: ...anger. When that happens both the shrimp and goby fish quickly retract into the burrow. - Pre-historic art (9744 bytes)
7: ...ns may have developed a sophisticated and more complicated artistic tradition.
12: The Mesolithic period has some examples of portable art, like painted pebbles ([[Azilie...
15: ... to the [[11th millennium BC]]. The Jōmon people were making clay figures and vessels decorated w...
18: ...present either humans or mixtures of humans and [[fish]].
20: ...ther the elaborate pottery decoration of, for example, the [[Želiesovce]] and painted [[Lengyel]]... - Heraldry (23465 bytes)
3: ...ome sort of landscape), and then it describes the placement and tinctures of the different charges (ob...
5: ...still being the same letter.<sup>1</sup> For example, almost always the shape of the shield is immate...
9: ...rly useful when there is insufficient space to display the entire coat-of-arms, and this practice may ...
12: ...artouche (an [[oval]]-shaped vehicle for their display). For more detail on the use of the lozenge (s...
16: ... instances the shield may be blazoned as being displayed on a ''cartouche'', the tincture of which is ... - Clarinet (18825 bytes)
4: ...f some student instruments, composite material or plastic [[resin]]. The instrument uses a single [[re...
6: A person who plays the clarinet is called a [[clarinetist]].
11: ... there are few restrictions to what it is able to play.
20: ... (music)|reed]] which is held in the mouth by the player. Vibrating the reed produces the instrument's...
22: The body is equipped with a complicated set of seven tone holes (six front, one bac...
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