Flying Gurnard
Habitat & Facts
flying gurnard, (family Dactylopteridae), any of a small group of marine fish comprising the family Dactylopteridae (order Scorpaeniformes). Flying gurnards are similar to the sea robins, or gurnards (family Triglidae, order Scorpaeniformes), and are sometimes considered as relatives of that group (see sea robin).
Found in warm and tropical seas, flying gurnards are elongated fish with very large pectoral fins, each of which is divided into a shorter forward portion and a much larger winglike posterior section. These fins are quite colourful; those of Dactylopterus volitans, a flying gurnard species found in the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea, for example, are brightly spotted with blue. Flying gurnards are further characterized by a covering of bony plates on their heads and by a single dorsal fin ray, separate from the rest of the fin and located on the nape of the neck. Flying gurnards grow to a maximum length of about 50 cm (20 inches). They are bottom dwellers but are reportedly able to glide above the water for short distances on their outspread pectoral fins.
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