Chimaeras are cartilaginous fishes in the order Chimaeriformes. They are related to the sharks and rays, and are sometimes called ghost sharks.
Chimaeras live in temperate ocean floors and grow up to two meters long. Like other members of the class Chondrichthyes, chimaeras have a skeleton constructed of cartilage. Their skin is smooth and lacks scales, and their color can range from black to brownish gray.
For defense, most chimaeras have a poisonous spine located in front of the dorsal fin.
Chimaeras resemble sharks in some ways: they employ claspers for internal fertilization of females and they lay eggs with leathery cases. They differ from sharks in that their upper jaws are fused with their skulls; they have separate anal and urogenital openings; and they lack the many sharp and replaceable teeth of sharks, having instead a few large permanent grinding tooth plates.
There are about forty species in six genera and three families:
Family Callorhinchidae
Seekatzen | Chimaeriformes | Holocephali | Zeekatten | Helhodefisker | Chimerowate | Цельноголовые | 银鲛目 | химере
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"Chimaera".
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