Yes. It is a relatively uncommon fish off the east coast of Madagascar and most common near the Comoros islands. The native Comorians call the fish gombassa and do not fish for it since it is not very edible.
Coelacanths have been found off the coast of southern Africa near Madagascar.
Coelacanths eat whatever they find as they drift in the current. Because they can lift the upper jaw as well as move the lower jaw, coelacanths can open their mouths quite far to suck prey from crevices
sliths
Yes. They do exist today (2014).
Yes it does exist today, but it did not exist until the 1920's.
The incas don't exist today
Not really. In 1995, results from a dive counted about 40 coelacanths. The number has changed since then, but coelacanths are still nowhere near abundant. South African fisherman who fish for oilfish sometimes catch a coelacanth by accident. Without the strength to swim hundreds of meters back to their habitat, they usually die. Some of them get sold to scientists. As far as we know, coelacanths are very rare. Prior to around 1940, we thought they were extinct. They are still in danger.
the countreys that dont exist today are yogusalvia from world war 2
why do pieces of earths earliest crust not exist today
Olympia, Greece does not exist today.
No.
No!