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I am just wondering and have never known.

2007-08-13 15:48:31 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Zoology

4 answers

Fishes do have gonads, but they are internal and not visible on the outside.
The male fish's gonads produce milt, which fertilizes the roe (eggs, produced by the female's gonads) usually as the roe is being expelled into the water. Both the roe and the milt are expelled through the vent, which is also used to expel urine and feces.
In some species of fish that are live-bearing, the male has a modified fin in the shape of a tube, to insert the milt into the female's vent and fertilize the roe internally.

2007-08-13 16:03:16 · answer #1 · answered by The First Dragon 7 · 1 0

here's a picture of fish anatomy I found http://dj003.k12.sd.us/images/fish%20dissection/anatomy2.jpg

Fish Dissection - Gonads The sexes of fishes are usually separate. Males usually have paired testes that produce sperm, and females usually have paired ovaries that produce eggs.
http://amonline.net.au/FISHES/students/dissect/gonads.htm

2007-08-13 15:59:34 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Just wondering (ha,ha,ha).
Not like human males. In fact, many species just issue sperm into the open over eggs laid by the female. (what a drag!)

2007-08-13 15:54:45 · answer #3 · answered by cattbarf 7 · 0 0

only after you feed them a man penis from a asian guy then give him the hair of a black man then the ears of a white guy, and the fish looks at the booty of a latina

2007-08-14 04:08:48 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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