ChatterBank2 mins ago
Do fish get thirsty?
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Do fish get thirsty.... my crazy brother-in-law wants to know!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm going to beg to differ on that. I'll have a proper look some time but iirc, freshwater and saltwater fish are different in the way water enters and leaves the body through osmosis.
One of the types....possibly saltwater fish, have to drink constantly as the water loss through the body walls is constant due to osmosis where as the other type of fish has to constantly urinate as the intake of water through the body is constant. As i say, the old memory isn't as good as it used to be so i'll try to find out for you.
However....as mentioned, fish don't get thirsty as in...."oh i could murder a pint" !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
One of the types....possibly saltwater fish, have to drink constantly as the water loss through the body walls is constant due to osmosis where as the other type of fish has to constantly urinate as the intake of water through the body is constant. As i say, the old memory isn't as good as it used to be so i'll try to find out for you.
However....as mentioned, fish don't get thirsty as in...."oh i could murder a pint" !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Not a crazy question as it may first seem, tell your brother-in-law.
For most fish getting a drink of water would be no problem but if that fish happens to be an amphibian-like fish such as a Mudskipper which spends 3/4 of it's time out of the water then Yes! it will get thirsty from time to time and will feel the need to go back into the water to store some water in it's gills, this is how it manages to survive for so long out of water!
When on land it uses it's modified pectoral fins to walk along on the mud and tree roots.
For most fish getting a drink of water would be no problem but if that fish happens to be an amphibian-like fish such as a Mudskipper which spends 3/4 of it's time out of the water then Yes! it will get thirsty from time to time and will feel the need to go back into the water to store some water in it's gills, this is how it manages to survive for so long out of water!
When on land it uses it's modified pectoral fins to walk along on the mud and tree roots.