• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Holy Mola: World’s Heaviest Bony Fish Is An Absolute Unit At 2,744kg

October 13, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

They say mighty oaks from little acorns grow, and never has this saying been more apt than for the lifecycle of giant molas. These epic slabs for fish start out their lives like marine popcorn and grow to gargantuan sizes. Now, one specimen has become the heaviest bony fish in the world, weighing in at a hefty 2,744 kilograms (6,050 pounds).

Ocean sunfishes, as molas are also called, are known to be the heaviest living bony fishes and can stretch to over 3 meters (nearly 10 feet) in length. There are three species: ocean sunfish (Mola mola), giant sunfish (Mola alexandrini) and the hoodwinker sunfish (Mola tecta). They spend their lives moving between the deep ocean and sea surface where they can be found basking side-up in an effort to warm up and get a parasiticide treatment in the form of grooming gulls.

Advertisement

In December 2021, a dead giant sunfish was found floating near Faial Island off Horta Harbor in the Azores archipelago, Portugal. The absolute unit was heaved aboard by the Azores marine strandings network (Rede de Arrojamentos de Cetáceos dos Açores) and weighed back on land with the aid of a forklift truck.

The weigh-in revealed it was 2,744 kilograms with a body length of 3.59 meters, making it the heaviest bony fish on record.

“The M. alexandrini reported here is the heaviest extant teleost specimen reported to date,” wrote the scientists behind the discovery. “It exceeds by nearly half a ton (444 kg [979 pounds]) the largest previously known specimen (2300 kg [5,070 pounds]), caught off Kamogawa, Japan in 1996… Giant sunfishes M. alexandrini can thus reach more than twice the maximum weight of its congeneric, the ocean sunfish M. mola (heaviest record 1320 kg [2,910 pounds]).”

Advertisement

As for what killed the ocean giant, researchers working on the discovery aren’t yet sure. A dent on its head with signs of paint indicates the animal was hit by the keel of a boat at some point, but whether this happened pre- or post-mortem isn’t clear.

The team hopes to continue working on the specimen to see what new insights it could yield about this rare, elusive, and – evidently – world-record-breakingly enormous species. For those not yet blessed by the sight of giant sunfish larvae, please feast your eyes upon it in all its adorable popcorn-like wonder. And as if that isn’t cute enough, in their infancy these oceanic slabs get the zoomies, too.

Who said absolute units couldn’t be precious?

Advertisement

The discovery was published in the Journal Of Fish Biology.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Tennis-Canadian teen Fernandez pulls off another upset to reach U.S. Open final
  2. Twitter accelerates again with Bitcoin tips, NFTs, recorded Spaces, creator fund and more
  3. Lamborghini Huracán STO: A final celebration before electrification
  4. Google to invest $1 billion in Africa over five years

Source Link: Holy Mola: World's Heaviest Bony Fish Is An Absolute Unit At 2,744kg

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Denisovan DNA May Make Some People Resistant To Malaria
  • Beware The Kellas Cat? This “Cryptid” Turned Out To Be Real, But It Wasn’t What People Thought
  • “They Simply Have A Taste For The Hedonists Among Us”: Festival Mosquito Study Has Some Bad News
  • What Is The Purpose Of Those Lines On Your Towels?
  • The Invisible World Around Us: How Can We Capture And Clean The Air We Breathe?
  • 85-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Eggs Dated Using “Atomic Clock For Fossils” For The First Time
  • Why Shouldn’t You Kiss Babies? New Study Shows Even Healthy Newborns Can Become Severely Ill With RSV
  • Earth Has A New Quasi-Moon – And It Has Probably Been Around For Decades
  • Want To Kill Your Prey? Do It Feather-Legged Lace Weaver Spider Style And Vomit All Over Them
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Are We In The Anthropocene?
  • The Wildfire Paradox Affecting 440 Million People Has As Worrying A Solution As You’d Expect
  • AI May Infringe On Your Rights And Insult Your Dignity (Unless We Do Something Soon)
  • How Do You Study Cryptic Species? We’re Finally Lifting The Lid On The World’s Least Understood Mammals
  • Once-In-A-Decade Close Encounter With Hazardous Asteroid 2025 FA22 Approaches
  • With 229 Pairs, This Beautiful Animal Has The Highest Number Of Chromosomes Of Any Animal
  • “An Unimaginable Breakthrough”: Loudest-Ever Gravitational Wave Collision Proves Stephen Hawking Correct
  • Exciting Martian Mudstone Has Features That Might Be Considered Biosignatures
  • How Long Did Dinosaurs Live? “It’s A Big Surprise To People That Work On Them”
  • NASA’s Mysterious Announcement: “Clearest Sign Of Life That We’ve Ever Found On Mars”
  • New Brain Implant Can Decode Your Internal Monologue, Raising Fears Of Mind Reading
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version