Exclusive Edition - The Ultimate Field Guide to Photography: Buy Now!
Visit our Online Shops

Sign up for free

Newsletters

Once a month
get new photos
and expert tips.

Atlantic Bluefin Tuna
Thunnus thynnus

Photo: A bluefin tuna eating
A bluefin tuna eating
Photograph by Brian J. Skerry

Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Profile

The Atlantic bluefin tuna is one of the largest, fastest, and most gorgeously colored of all the world’s fishes. Their torpedo-shaped, streamlined bodies are built for speed and endurance. Their coloring—metallic blue on top and shimmering silver-white on the bottom—helps camouflage them from above and below. And their voracious appetite and varied diet pushes their average size to a whopping 6.5 feet (2 meters) in length and 550 pounds (250 kilograms), although much larger specimens are not uncommon.

Unfortunately for the species however, bluefin meat also happens to be regarded as surpassingly delicious, particularly among sashimi eaters, and overfishing throughout their range has driven their numbers to critically low levels.

Atlantic bluefins are warm-blooded, a rare trait among fish, and are comfortable in the cold waters off Newfoundland and Iceland, as well as the tropical waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the Mediterranean Sea, where they go each year to spawn. They are among the most ambitiously migratory of all fish, and some tagged specimens have been tracked swimming from North American to European waters several times a year.

They are prized among sport fishers for their fight and speed, shooting through the water with their powerful, crescent-shaped tails up to 43 miles (70 kilometers) per hour. They can retract their dorsal and pectoral fins into slots to reduce drag. And some scientists think the series of “finlets” on their tails may even serve to reduce water turbulence.

Bluefins attain their enormous size by gorging themselves almost constantly on smaller fish, crustaceans, squid, and eels. They will also filter-feed on zooplankton and other small organisms and have even been observed eating kelp. The largest tuna ever recorded was an Atlantic bluefin caught off Nova Scotia that weighed 1,496 pounds (679 kilograms).

Bluefin tuna have been eaten by humans for centuries. However, in the 1970s, demand and prices for large bluefins soared worldwide, particularly in Japan, and commercial fishing operations found new ways to find and catch these sleek giants. As a result, bluefin stocks, especially of large, breeding-age fish, have plummeted, and international conservation efforts have led to curbs on commercial takes. Nevertheless, at least one group says illegal fishing in Europe has pushed the Atlantic bluefin populations there to the brink of extinction.

Fast Facts

Type: Fish
Diet: Carnivore
Average lifespan in the wild: 15 years
Size: 6.5 ft (2 m)
Weight: 550 lbs (250 kg)
Group name: School
Did you know? In January 2001, a prime, 444-pound (201-kilogram) bluefin tuna sold in a Japanese fish market for $173,600 (¥20.2 million), a world record.
Protection status: Endangered
Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
Illustration of the animal's relative size

Multimedia

Related Fish Features

Photo: Atlantic salmon

Atlantic Salmon

Find out why dwindling wild salmon numbers are turning this once abundant fish into "chickens of the sea" in this feature.

Photo: Tiger shark

Shark Bay

Get up close and personal with the voracious tiger sharks of Australia's Shark Bay in this Field Tales feature.

Photo: Great white shark

Kids: Shark Creature Feature

Get fun facts on great white sharks, plus video, audio, photos, and more at National Geographic's Kids site.

Photo: Parrotfish

Sulu-Sulawesi Seas

Tour these diverse marine communities—experience the sights and sounds of this tropical habitat.

How You Can Help

More Fish Profiles

Map: Locator map for the Atlantic bluefin tuna
 Atlantic Bluefin Tuna range

Special Advertising Sections

Photo: The Cloud Gate in Chicago

Download City Guides

Check out the local hotspots.

Photo: Valero train

Interactive Map

Visit Siemens locations with this interactive map.

Fish Right Rail

Get the Latest Headlines

Photo: Grizzly bears

Make us your online news source.

Get Animal Pictures

Photo: Anemonefish

Get your daily dose of photos.

For Kids!

Photo: A cartoon dog

It's no stretch to find fun facts on our Kids site!

Six Degrees Book and DVD

Image: Six Degrees DVD and book

Get an eye-opening warning of the dangers of climate change, one degree at a time.