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How Do Flying Fishes “Fly?” Well, Actually, They Glide.

Why do flying fishes fly? To escape predators, to flee from surprises like boat engines next them, perhaps to entertain you during the ride to a dive site. In any event, they earn their names by propelling themselves out of the water and gliding for long distances on broad pectoral fins.

Torpedo-shaped and silvery, sometimes with markings in subdued colors, they’re not especially exotic visually. But they’re impressive both underwater and in the air.

Beating their tails back and forth as they break the surface, flying fishes add speed to their takeoffs, leaving behind wiggly lines in the water.

YOU’RE UNLIKELY TO SPOT ANY FLYING FISHES WHILE DIVING ON THE REEF but you might well see them sailing along beside your boat during the ride to the dive on the reef. And, yes, these open-ocean denizens do fly – in the form of lengthy glides through the air. And they do it well enough to attract the interest of engineers as to their aerodynamic qualities.

IN AIR & SEA

Flying fishes, more than 40 species in Family Exocoetidae, are open-water, fishes found in oceans worldwide, mostly in tropical and semi-tropical regions. They’re superbly equipped to be fast swimmers under the surface and long-term gliders above it.

WHY DO FLYING FISHES FLY?

Mostly, they fly to escape predators, of which there are a lot. These include mackerels, tunas, swordfish, marlin, porpoises, squids and other piscivores, fast swimmers in their own right.

A researcher at the U.S.’s National Marine Fisheries Services displays the broad pectoral fins of a flying fish, species not stated.

An airborne escape gives them a secret weapon – the ability to instantly disappear from their pursuers in an unknown direction and distance. And they can do so airborne at a faster rate than underwater. Unfortunately, it also means they’re at risk of in-air predation by seabirds during their time above water.

For their own part, flying fishes are generally described as omnivores, willing to eat anything that comes their way. Mostly, they’re planktivores, taking in zooplankton, primarily small crustaceans like copepods, as they zoom through the water.

HOW DO FLYING FISHES FLY?

To be clear, flying fishes aren’t able to engage in powered flight. They’re strictly gliders that achieve a long in-air trajectory that starts with powerful underwater tail action that sends them up to 35 miles per hour before takeoff.

To initiate lift-off from underwater, they coil their bodies in a “C” shape and propel themselves forward. On the surface, with tails whose lower lobes are longer than their upper sections, they flick their tails, against the water, producing a wiggly line.

A sailfin flying fish (Parexocoetus brachypterus) sketched for a 1903 catalog of marine fauna in the Hawaiian Islands.

As they start to break the surface, the rapid back-and-forth tail action enhances their velocity. Spreading their fins, they achieve heights of as much as 20 feet, speeds up to 40 miles an hour. They glide in gentle arcs that have been known to stretch more than 600 feet.

HOW DO FLYING FISHES FLY? – FLIGHT PLANS

One key to how flying fishes fly so successfully is that, like birds, they also take advantage of updrafts to enhance their flight paths, in the fishy fliers’ cases, updrafts associated with the leading edges of waves.

As they arc back toward the sea, they can beat their tails on the watery surface to relaunch their flights for another glide. Some have been recorded using consecutive glides to extend their flights to more than 1,200 feet.

Returning to the water, they fold their fins back and assume the torpedo-shape that facilitates fast swimming. A flying fish near Japan holds the record for a flight lasting 45 seconds.

A sketch illustrates a prototypical flying fish’s anatomy, including broad pectoral wings and an unevenly notched tail with a longer lower lobe, In ‘”four-winged” flying fishes, the pelvic wings are also enlarged, aiding in flight duration.

HOW DO FLYING FISHES FLY? – AERODYNAMICS

After reading his children a book that talked about the fishy fliers, a Seoul National University engineer named Haecheon Choi became so interested in them that he and a colleague decided to investigate how they did it. Their curiosity was good for science but bad for the fishes they obtained, which were dried and stuffed with their fins extended for aerodynamic research in a wind tunnel.

They found the fishes’ lift-to-drag ratios compares well with those of birds like teals and wood ducks. And the ratio (and distances) were greatest when the fish glided parallel to the surface, as they optimally do in the real world. And, they found, gliding along close to the ocean surface appeared to improve their ratio.

HOW DO FLYING FISHES FLY? – HYDRODYNAMICS

As a graduate mechanical engineering student at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Patricia Yang took a different approach. In research conducted in Taiwan, she focused on the fishes’ in-water technique as they prepared to launch themselves from ocean to air. Working with juveniles, she and her colleagues used high-speed video to monitor the speed and angle with which their subjects broke the surface – a formidable challenge for juveniles.

They found that in less than a second the little fishes accelerated to four to five times the earth’s gravity. Once in the air, they achieved gliding speeds as fast as 3.3 ft/1.3 m per second – 10 times faster moving through the air than underwater.

A band-wing flying fish (Cheilopogon exsiliens), a denizen of the Atlantic basin found from Cape Cod to Brazil.

HOW DO FLYING FISHES FLY? – BASICS

HOW DO FLYING FISHES FLY? – FISHY FLIER ERRATA

A modern-day artist’s recreation of an ancient Minoan fresco found during early 20th Century excavations on the Greek Island of Milos.

PRINCIPAL SOURCES: Marine Biology, Peter Castro, Michael Huber; Marine Life, Caribbean, Bahamas, Florida, Marty Snyderman & Clay Wiseman; Encyclopedia of Fishes, John Paxton and William Eschmeyer; Reef Fish Identification Florida, Caribbean, Bahamas, Paul Humann, Ned DeLoach; Flying Fish, National Wildlife Federation;  Flying Fish, National Geographic; Flying Fish: Missiles of the Sea, Loyola University of New Orleans; Why fish jump and how they do it, ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Company);  Flying fish, Encyclopedia Britannica; Flying fish, Exocet, Barbados, et.al., Wikipedia; Coucou & Flying Fish, Barbados Pocket Guide; FLYING FISH GLIDE AS WELL AS BIRDS, Journal Of Experimental Biology; Facinating Flying Fish, physics central; Flying Fish Fly, Discovery.

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