And their coldness, no doubt, proceeds from their not breathing?
MRS. B.
All kinds of fish breathe more or less, though in a much smaller degree than land animals. Nor are they entirely destitute of animal heat, though, for the same reason, they are much colder than other creatures. They have comparatively but a very small quantity of blood, therefore but very little oxygen is required, and a proportionally small quantity of animal heat is generated.
CAROLINE.
But how can fish breathe under water?
MRS. B.
They breathe by means of the air which is dissolved in the water, and if you put them into water deprived of air by boiling, they are soon suffocated.
If a fish is confined in a vessel of water closed from the air, it soon dies; and any fish put in afterwards would be killed immediately, as all the air had been previously consumed.
CAROLINE.
Are there any species of animals that breathe more than we do?