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Home > Shark Anatomy > Hydrodynamics and Performance > An Organism for Hydrodanamism Shark AnatomyAn Organism for HydrodynamismThe first parameter to be set for any aquatic animal is that of its buoyancy, which must be variable at minimal energy costs. So the bony fish possess an inflatable swimbladder, and the sharks have acquired - during the course of evolution - an extremely sophisticated double adaptation. The first adaptation transformed these bony fish into cartilaginous fish, replacing the solid bony frame with a cartilaginous skeleton. This development might seem regressive in comparison with the animal world as a whole were it not doubly beneficial:
The second adaptation is the acquisition of a very large liver, proportionately the biggest in the animal world, to the point where one wonders whether it is this factor that determines the overall length of the body. This liver is all the more imposing the nearer to the
surface preferred habitat of the species in
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