The Record-Breaking Bite of Megapiranha (2024)

There’s a terrible B-movie from 2010 called Megapiranha, about giant, genetically modified piranhas that wreak havoc upon Floridian tourists. One of them leaps out of the water and bites a helicopter. It’s all rather silly, but if you look on Wikipedia’s entry for the film, you’ll see these words at the top: “For the prehistoric creature, see Megapiranha.”

Yes, Megapiranha existed. At around 71 centimetres long, it wasn’t big enough to attack a chopper, but it was still three times the size of its modern meat-eating cousins.

Now Justin Grubich from American University in Cairo has found that Megapiranha and its modern relatives have some of the strongest bites of any fish, relative to their size. Pound for pound, they chomp down with more force than bigger icons like the Megalodon, the whale-killing monster shark.

The piranha family are known as serrasalmids, a word that, delightfully, means “serrated salmon”. Only some of them are flesh-eaters like the famous red-bellied species. Many are vegetarians—they’re known as pacu. And one species, called the wimple piranha, feeds only on fish scales.

The Record-Breaking Bite of Megapiranha (1)

You can tell their dietary habits by the shape of their mouths and teeth. The meat-eaters have a thuggish underbite and single row of triangular blades, each one serrated like a steak knife. But a pacu’s teeth are squarer, straighter, and eerily human—all the better for crushing nuts and seeds.

Megapiranha sat somewhere between the two. It lived between five and ten million years ago in Argentina, and a team of palaeontologists led by Alberto Luis Cione announced it to the world in 2009. So far, they have only recovered part of the animal’s upper jaw, but that is enough to diagnose it as a big piranha. The teeth look like the serrated triangular gnashers of modern meat-eaters, but they also had thick broad bases. These were multi-purpose tools that could crush hard food as well as slice soft flesh.

The Record-Breaking Bite of Megapiranha (2)

Grubich estimated how strongly Megapiranha could bite by first studying its largest modern relative, the black piranha. Together with Steve Huskey from Western Kentucky University, he caught 15 individuals and let them chomp down on a force gauge.* The piranhas bit with forces that ranged from 67 to 320 Newtons (15 to 72 pounds)—substantial for such a relatively small mouth.

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Relative to body size, this is the strongest bite ever recorded for a fish, and three times stronger than for an alligator of the same size. As Grubich says, the piranha “can bite with a force more than 30 times its weight, a remarkable feat yet unmatched among vertebrates”.

The Record-Breaking Bite of Megapiranha (3)

Its secret is a huge group of jaw-closing muscles. These take up virtually the entire space behind the fish’s eye and mouth (labelled AM and A1 in the diagram), and make up 2 percent of its weight! They also attach to a point far up the lower jaw, allowing the fish to transmit as much of the muscle’s force as possible into the tip of its jaws. Combine this with aggressive biting tactics, and “it should come as no surprise that black piranha, whether large or small, can rapidly and efficiently excise large chunks out of their prey,” says Grubich.

But Megapiranha was even more efficient. The black piranhas that Grubich collected varied in length from 20 to 37 centimetres long, and even a small increase in size translated to a huge increase in bite strength. By extrapolating from his living fish to the larger Megapiranha**, he estimated that the prehistoric giant could have bitten with a force of 1,240 to 4,749 Newtons (279 to 1,068 pounds). That’s at least four times more force than the largest black piranha.

The Record-Breaking Bite of Megapiranha (4)

If you compare different predators, and correct biting forces for size, Megapiranha is the undoubted champion. For example, Tyrannosaurus rex could bite with a force of over 13,400 Newtons, more than three times Megapiranha’s top efforts. Then again, T.rex was 100 times heavier!

And even without any scaling, the prehistoric piranha was still pretty impressive. Its bite would have been as strong as that of a small, 400 kilogram great white shark, even though it would have weighed just 10 kilograms.

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What did Megapiranha actually do with such a strong bite? As I mentioned, the shape of its teeth suggests that it could crush hard food and slice soft flesh. But rather than crunching through hard nuts, as pacus do today, Grubich thinks that it used its slice-and-crush teeth to break into the bones of its prey, or through the defences of turtles and armoured fish.

Grubich even checked that it could do so by creating a metal-alloy replica of the fossilised jaw and testing it. The replica, which had the same strength and hardness as a piranha’s jaw, was strong enough to cause “catastrophic punctures” in a cow’s femur, a turtle’s shell, and an armoured catfish’s scales. So we know that Megapiranha could have eaten such foods. Of course, we can’t conclude that it did until we find fossils with the right tooth marks.

Reference: Grubich, Huskey, Crofts, Orti & Porto. 2012. Mega-Bites: Extreme jaw forces of living

and extinct piranhas (Serrasalmidae). Scientific Reports. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep01009

* The paper is full of the delightfully dry language of academia: “In-vivo experiments in the field to elicit and record ecologically realistic biting behaviours for predatory species are rare, dangerous, and difficult to perform.” That is, no one wants to work with things that could take your hand off.

** Cione estimated that Megapiranha weighed 73 kilograms and was 1.3 metres long, but by comparing the jaw fragments with the jaw of the black piranha, Grubich thinks it was smaller – 10 kilograms, and just 0.7 metres long.

More on super-bites:

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The Record-Breaking Bite of Megapiranha (2024)

FAQs

The Record-Breaking Bite of Megapiranha? ›

By extrapolating from his living fish to the larger Megapiranha**, he estimated that the prehistoric giant could have bitten with a force of 1,240 to 4,749 Newtons (279 to 1,068 pounds). That's at least four times more force than the largest black piranha.

What is the bite force of a Megapiranha? ›

This dentition is reminiscent of both the double-row seen in pacus, and the single row seen in the teeth of modern piranhas, suggesting that M. paranensis is a transitional form. Its bite force is estimated between 1,240–4,749 N (279–1,068 lbf).

Why did Megapiranha go extinct? ›

However, when the Andes Mountains rose, they separated the two basins, which scientists think caused mega-piranha to go extinct. "You ended up with these isolated pockets, the habitat shrunk " Grubich told LiveScience. "There no longer were prey resources available to sustain its body size."

Which fish has the most powerful bite? ›

The Black Piranha has the strongest bite force relative to its size of any living or extinct fish. The muscles of its jaw are disproportionate to its size, which allows the black piranha to have a bite force equivalent to 30 times of its body weight. It's a feat unmatched in the animal world.

Is Megapiranha real? ›

Megapiranha is an extinct serrasalmid fish described in 2009. The name is a combination of the word "mega" and piranha. This freshwater fish is called megapiranha, giant serrasalmid, or cutting fish by people in other countries.

What did Megapiranha eat? ›

The only logical conclusion is that Megapiranha was an all-purpose predator of the Miocene epoch, chowing down not only on fish (and any mammals or reptiles foolish enough to venture into its river habitat) but also large turtles, crustaceans, and other shelled creatures.

Is piranha bite painful? ›

In summary, while piranhas are carnivorous and can deliver painful bites, they are not inherently bloodthirsty creatures seeking out human prey. Piranha attacks on humans are infrequent and usually involve minor injuries.

What is bigger than a piranha? ›

Pacu, unlike piranha, mainly feed on plant material and not flesh or scales. Additionally, the pacu can reach much larger sizes than piranha, at up to 1.08 m (3 ft 61⁄2 in) in total length and 40 kg (88 lb) in weight.

Did piranhas ever exist? ›

Though estimates vary, around 30 species inhabit the lakes and rivers of South America today. Fossil evidence puts piranha ancestors in the continent's rivers 25 million years ago, but modern piranha genera may have only been around for 1.8 million years.

What is the extinct giant fish? ›

Leedsichthys is possibly the largest fish ever, and certainly the largest known bony fish. It is estimated that the largest Leedsichthys could have grown up to sixteen meters. However, not all of them were this massive, and individuals above fourteen meters in length were probably not common.

How strong is a piranha jaw? ›

The 2010 study found that a 2-pound black piranha generated a bite force of 70 pounds per square inch or 35 times its body weight. Bite pressures exceeded 20,000 PSI. “Imagine if a great white shark could do that,” Dr.

What can 700 psi crush? ›

The US Navy's deepest submarines are able to survive about 700 PSI of pressure. Standard housing bricks can be crushed at about 700 PSI as well.

Is the Megapiranha extinct? ›

Correcting for body size differences reveals that both the living Serrasalmus rhombeus and the extinct Megapiranha paranensis have among the most powerful bites in carnivorous fishes, living or extinct.

Can you tame Megapiranha? ›

The Megapiranha is highly territorial and does not respond favorably to visitors. Many have tried to pacify the hostile Megapiranha by herding them into a group with various lures. Unfortunately, none of this proved to be successful in attempting to domesticate the creature.

What fish is mistaken for a piranha? ›

It's called a pacu,” Foy said. Foy said pacus are often mistaken for piranhas because they both have teeth. But a big difference is that piranhas have sharp teeth, and pacus have human-like teeth.

What is the strongest reptile bite force? ›

The saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) is often heralded as the animal with the strongest bite on Earth. In a 2012 study, the bite of one individual was recorded at 16,414 Newtons or 3,689 pounds of force—making it the strongest recorded bite of any individual animal.

What Dino has the strongest bite force? ›

The iconic dinosaur's jaws may have been much more powerful than scientists suspected. Of all the bites in the animal world, the Tyrannosaurus rex's may be the most famously terrifying. Now, it's also the strongest known to science, according to new research.

What animal has the highest bite force? ›

The saltwater crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) has the strongest physically measured bite force at 16,414 N. This powerful bite came from one 3,689-pound (1,763.3-kg) individual as part of a 2012 study that measured the bite force of 83 adult specimens from all 23 recognized crocodilian species.

What pet has the strongest bite force? ›

"The Kangal Shepherd is a Turkish breed of dog that is known for its large size and impressive strength. With a bite force of 743 PSI, this breed is the undisputed king of the canine world when it comes to raw power.

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