Sailfish (Istiophorus platypterus)


About Sailfish (Istiophorus platypterus)
- Kingdom: Animals
- Phylum: Chordates
- Class: Ray-finned Fish
- Order: Jacks, Flounders, Barracudas, and Allies
- Family: Billfishes
The Indo-Pacific sailfish is a sailfish native to the Indian and Pacific Oceans and is naturalized in the Atlantic where it has entered the Mediterranean Sea via the Suez Canal as a Lessepsian migrant. It is dark blue on top, brown-blue laterally, silvery white underbelly; upper jaw elongated in the form of a spear; first dorsal fin greatly enlarged in the form of a sail, with many black cones, its front squared off, highest at its midpoint; pelvic fins very narrow, reaching almost to the anus; body covered with embedded scales, blunt at end; lateral line curved above pectoral fin, then straight to base of tail. They have a large and sharp bill, which they use for hunting. They feed on tuna and mackerel, some of the fastest fish in the ocean. Most authorities only recognise a single species of sailfish, I. platypterus.
Source: Wikipedia
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2025-02-08
Pemba - Ngezi Forest, Tanzania