To us, the environment in which fish dwell often seems cold, dark, and mysterious.
But there are advantages to living in water, and they have played an important role in making fish what they are.
One is that water isn't subject to sudden temperature changes.
Therefore it makes an excellent habitat for a cold-blooded animal.
Another advantage is the water's ability to easily support body weight.
Protoplasm has approximately the same density as water, so a fish in water is almost weightless.
This "weightlessness" in turn means two things: One, a fish can get along with a light weight and simple bonestructure, --- and two, limitations to a fish's size are practically removed.
Yet there is one basic difficulty to living in water --- the fact that it's incompressible.
For a fish to move through water, it must actually shove it aside.
Most can do this by wiggling back and forth in snakelike motion.
The fish pushes water aside by the forward motion of its head, and with the curve of its body and its flexible tail.
Next, the water flows back along the fish's narrowing sides, closing in at the tail, and helping the fish propel itself forward.
The fact that water is incompressible has literally shaped the development of fish.
A flat and angular shape can be moved through water only with difficulty.
And for this reason, fish have a basic shape that is beautifully adapted to deal with this peculiarity.