Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fish_fin> ?p ?o }
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fish fin#AnchPectoral".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fish fin#AnchVentral".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fish fin#Evolution".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fish fin#Ray-finned".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fish fin#Reproduction".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Internal fertilisation".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "Pectoral, pelvic, and caudal fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "abdominal".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "adipose fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "adipose".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "adipose-fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "anal fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "anal soft rays".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "anal spine".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "anal spines".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "anal".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "caudal fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "caudal peduncle".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "caudal".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal and anal fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal fin and the anal fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal soft rays".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal spine".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal spines".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "dorsal-fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "fin rays".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "fin spines".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "fish fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "fish's fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "gonopodium".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "heterocercal caudal fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "heterocercal tail".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pectoral and pelvic fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pectoral fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pectoral fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pectoral".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pectoral-fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pectorals".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "peduncle".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pelvic fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pelvic fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pelvic".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pelvic, anal and caudal fins".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "pelvic-fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "rays".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "tail fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "thoracic".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "ventral caudal fin".
- Fish_fin wikiPageWikiLinkText "ventral fins".
- Fish_fin align "center".
- Fish_fin align "left".
- Fish_fin align "right".
- Fish_fin caption "Drawing by Dr Tony Ayling ---- Finlets may influence the way a vortex develops around the tail fin.".
- Fish_fin caption "During courtship, the female cichlid, Pelvicachromis taeniatus, displays her visually arresting purple pelvic fin".
- Fish_fin caption "Fish get thrust moving vertical tail fins from side to side".
- Fish_fin caption "Flying fish achieve sufficient lift to glide above the surface of the water thanks to their enlarged pectoral fins".
- Fish_fin caption "Frogfish use their pectoral and pelvic fins to walk along the ocean bottom".
- Fish_fin caption "In some Asian countries shark fins are a culinary delicacy".
- Fish_fin caption "Large retractable dorsal fin of the Indo-Pacific sailfish".
- Fish_fin caption "Like boats and airplanes, fish need some control over six degrees of freedom, three translational and three rotational".
- Fish_fin caption "Many reef fish have pectoral and pelvic fins optimised for flattened bodies".
- Fish_fin caption "Stingrays get thrust from large pectoral fins".
- Fish_fin caption "The Oriental flying gurnard has large pectoral fins with eye spots which it displays to scare predators".
- Fish_fin caption "The dorsal fin of a white shark contain dermal fibers that work "like riggings that stabilize a ship's mast", and stiffen dynamically as the shark swims faster to control roll and yaw.".
- Fish_fin caption "The first spine of the dorsal fin of the anglerfish is modified so it functions like a fishing rod with a lure".
- Fish_fin caption "The thresher shark uses its caudal fin to stun prey".
- Fish_fin caption "This male mosquitofish has a gonopodium, an anal fin which functions as an intromittent organ".
- Fish_fin caption "This young male spinner shark has claspers, a modification to the pelvic fins which also function as intromittent organs".
- Fish_fin caption "Triggerfish squeeze into coral crevices to avoid predators, and lock themselves in place with the first spine of their dorsal fin".
- Fish_fin direction "horizontal".
- Fish_fin direction "vertical".
- Fish_fin header "Moving fins can provide thrust".
- Fish_fin header "Other uses of fins".
- Fish_fin header "Specialised fins are used to control motion".
- Fish_fin headerAlign "center".
- Fish_fin image "Alopias vulpinus Gervais.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Antennarius striatus.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Barb gonio 080525 9610 ltn Cf.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Carcharhinus brevipinna JNC3077 Male parts.JPG".
- Fish_fin image "Dactyloptena orientalis.JPG".
- Fish_fin image "Dasyatis thetidis.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Gambusia affinis male.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Holacanthus ciliaris 1.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Humpback anglerfish.png".
- Fish_fin image "Istiophorus platypterus .jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Pelvicachromis taeniatus.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Rotations.png".
- Fish_fin image "Sailfin flyingfish.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Shark finning icon.jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Thunnus obesus diagram cropped.GIF".
- Fish_fin image "White shark .jpg".
- Fish_fin image "Xanthichthys ringens - pone.0010676.g191.png".
- Fish_fin quote "Aristotle recognised the distinction between analogous and homologous structures, and made the following prophetic comparison: "Birds in a way resemble fishes. For birds have their wings in the upper part of their bodies and fishes have two fins in the front part of their bodies. Birds have feet on their underpart and most fishes have a second pair of fins in their under-part and near their front fins."".
- Fish_fin salign "right".
- Fish_fin source "– Aristotle, De incessu animalium".