,
Labroides phthirophagus. Needlefish, like all ray-finned
beloniforms, are capable of making short jumps out of the water at up to . Since needlefish swim near the surface, they often leap over the decks of shallow boats rather than going around. This jumping activity is greatly excited by
artificial light at night; night fisherman and divers in areas across the Pacific Ocean have been "attacked" by schools of suddenly excited needlefish diving across the water towards the light source at high speed. Their sharp beaks are capable of inflicting deep
puncture wounds, often breaking off inside the victim in the process. For many traditional
Pacific Islander communities, who primarily fish on
reefs from low boats, needlefish represent an even greater risk of injury than sharks. Occasional deaths and serious injuries have been attributed to needlefish. They include the following documented incidents: • In 1977, a 10-year-old
Hawaiian boy, night fishing with his father at
Hanamaulu Bay,
Kauai, was killed when a needlefish jumped from the water and pierced his eye and brain. • In 2007, a 16-year-old
Vietnamese boy was stabbed through the heart and killed by the beak of a needlefish while diving for
sea cucumbers at night near
Halong Bay. • In 2010, a kayaker in Florida was nearly killed when a crocodile needlefish (
houndfish,
Tylosurus crocodilus) leapt from the water and impaled her in the chest. • In 2012, German
kitesurfer Wolfram Reiners was seriously wounded in the foot by a needlefish near the Seychelles. • In May 2013, a kitesurfer in
Egypt's
Red Sea was speared directly under his knee when a needlefish jumped out of the water. • In October 2013, a Saudi Arabian news website also reported the death of a young Saudi man in
Dammam who died of hemorrhaging after being hit by a needlefish on the left side of the neck. • In 2014, a Russian tourist was nearly killed by a needlefish off
Nha Trang in Vietnam. The fish bit her neck and left pieces of its teeth inside her spinal cord, paralyzing her. • In early January 2016, a 39-year-old Indonesian woman from
Palu,
Central Sulawesi, was seriously injured when a half-metre-long needlefish jumped and pierced her just above the right eye. She was swimming in water 80 cm deep in Tanjung Karang Beach, a popular recreational spot in the
Donggala Regency, Central Sulawesi. She died a few hours later despite efforts to save her at a local hospital. Shortly after, pictures of her injury spread through instant-messaging applications, while several local news websites also reported the incident, some erroneously attributing the attack to a
marlin. • In December 2018, a needlefish struck the neck of a Thai Navy
special forces cadet, causing his death. • In October 2023, a needlefish impacted the left eye of a swimmer off the eastern coast of Panama. Needlefish beak fragments pierced the optic nerve and permanently blinded the eye. • In April 2024, a 59-year old fisherman off the coast of
Iloilo,
Panay Island,
Philippines, was pierced in the stomach by a needlefish (locally known as ) jumping out of the water. He was rushed to a nearby hospital but was declared
dead on arrival due to
hemorrhage. • In October 2024, an Italian surfer died in Indonesia after being impaled in her upper left chest by a needlefish. ==In the aquarium==