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SCHNOZZOLA









                    The sight of a marlin missing its iconic weapon challenges our

                    understanding of nature’s adaptability. How can such a predator hunt                                                   break in many ways: during hunts, while striking hard objects, through entanglement with man-
                                                                                                                                           made debris, or in battles with other marlin, tunas, sharks, and more. Fishermen have caught sharks,
                    without its most defining feature? The answer is a compelling study in                                                 tuna, and other marlin with broken bills impaled in their bodies. There are witnesses to blue marlin
                                                                                                                                           that have been caught with the broken bill of a white marlin sticking out of their bodies. While its
                    resilience, adaptation, and the raw tenacity of life in the ocean.







































                 While it may seem like a death sentence, mount-  years of underwater observation has revealed
                 ing evidence from anglers, marine biologists, and   that marlin hunt by slashing sideways through
                 tagging programs is revealing a far more nu-   bait balls—tightly packed schools of fish—injuring
                 anced—and inspiring—truth: marlin can, and of-  or stunning multiple prey with each pass allow-
                 ten do, survive with broken bills. They adapt their   ing them to circle back for an easy meal. These
                 hunting strategies, shift their diets, and exhibit re-  high-efficiency strikes give the marlin a competi-
                 markable resilience that defies expectations.   tive edge in the frenzied, chaotic marine buffet of
                                                                pelagic life.
                 Marine biologists have long understood that the
                 bill isn’t used to impale. High-speed footage and   But life in the ocean is far from forgiving. Bills                             “Against predators or rivals, the bill becomes a shield
                                                                                                                                                         as much as a sword, defending with jabs, slashes,

                                                                                                                                                                                                    and evasive speed.”



                                                                                                                                                                                             - Dr. Kelsey James | MARINE BIOLOGIST, NOAA


      48                                   F IS H ON! - OCEAN CITY                                                                                                                                                                           49
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