Flying fish can glide for considerable distances, typically ranging from 30 to 200 meters (about 100 to 650 feet) depending on the species and environmental conditions. They achieve this by gaining speed underwater and then leaping out of the water, spreading their wing-like fins to catch the air. In ideal conditions, some species have been recorded gliding even farther, but their primary purpose for gliding is to evade predators.
No they do not they glide
The longest recorded gliding fish have traveled up to 400 m and were airborne for about 30 seconds.
flying fish
fly ,grow,glide, swim,
A flying fish moves like any other fish but often leaps from the water and extends its fins. This causes the fish to glide above the water for some distance. A flying fish actually moves its tail up to about 70 times per second to get enough speed to glide.
dragons dont exist
A flying squirrel, certain types of snakes and a flying fish. These all can glide through the air without wings.
Glide on their pectoral fins
No, fish can't actually fly, not even 'flying fish'. What they really do is glide across the water, which makes them look like they are flying.
10 feet
Flying fish are typically found in surface waters of the ocean, where they can leap and glide to escape predators. They are not deep-water species and do not live at great depths. Flying fish generally stay within the top few meters of the water column.
really! You DONT see fish flying, are you crazy: they don't fly! Flying fish do exist. They are real and are a saltwater breed. They live in schools. They are shaped as a "fish" similar to freshwater perch. They glide short distances.