Maybe this – fishy? – tale from the Daily Telegraph shows that the piscine masses are gathering to resist mammalian domination:
Its waters are already infested by man-eating alligators and razor-toothed sharks, but now Florida residents are being warned of another peril – flying fish.
A prehistoric fish has literally leapt its way to the top of the Sunshine State’s wildlife danger list after a series of incidents that have left dozens of river users injured. Officials at Florida’s Fish and Wildlife Commission (FFWC) have launched a campaign to warn people that a brush with an “armour plated” sturgeon – an endangered species that dates back 225 million years and can grow to 8ft and weigh 200lb – could send them to the surgeon.
Some of the victims have been knocked overboard, rendered unconscious and even left in a coma after giant Gulf sturgeon jumped out of the Suwannee River and slapped them with their rock-hard scales. Other injuries have included a fractured spine, a collapsed lung, ruptured spleen, slit throat, broken ribs and wounds that have required plasticsurgery. . . .
It is not clear what prompts the sturgeons’ acrobatics, although their leaping season appears to run from June to August. Some scientists believe the fish use it as a form of communication, others think it is aimed at flushing the gills. Some theorise that sturgeon leap simply because they can.
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