Billfish are large swift
predators which spend most of their time in the
epipelagic zone of the
open ocean. They feed voraciously on smaller
pelagic fish,
crustaceans and small
squid. Some billfish species also hunt
demersal fish on the seafloor, while others descend periodically to mesopelagic depths. They may come closer to the coast when they
spawn in the summer. Their eggs and larvae are pelagic, that is they float freely in the water column. Like
scombroids (tuna, bonito and mackerel), billfish have both the ability to migrate over long distances, efficiently cruising at slow speeds, and the ability to generate rapid bursts of speed. These speed bursts can be quite astonishing, and the
Indo-Pacific sailfish has been recorded making a burst of 68 miles per hour (110 km/h), nearly top speed for a
cheetah and the highest speed ever recorded for a fish. "Like the large tuna, some billfish maintain their body temperature several degrees above ambient water temperatures; this elevated body temperature increases the efficiency of the swimming muscles, especially during excursions into the cold water below the
thermocline." In 1936 the British zoologist
James Gray posed a conundrum which has come to be known as
Gray's paradox. The problem he posed was how dolphins can swim and accelerate so fast when it seemed their muscles lacked the needed power. If this is a problem with dolphins it is an even greater problem with billfish such as swordfish, which swim and accelerate faster than dolphins. In 2009, Taiwanese researchers from the
National Chung Hsing University introduced new concepts of "kidnapped airfoils and circulating horsepower" to explain the swimming capabilities of swordfish. The researchers claim this analysis also "solves the perplexity of dolphin's Gray paradox". They also assert that swordfish "use sensitive rostrum/lateral-line sensors to detect upcoming/ambient water pressure and attain the best attack angle to capture the body lift power aided by the forward-biased dorsal fin to compensate for most of the water resistance power." Billfish have prominent
dorsal fins. Like tuna, mackerel and other scombroids, billfish streamline themselves by retracting their dorsal fins into a groove in their body when they swim. ==Distribution and migration==