This Bird Manages to Gulp Down a Huge Fish Bigger Than Its Whole Head

Double-crested cormorant with fish
iStock.com/passion4nature

Written by Kellianne Matthews

Updated: June 25, 2025

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You know that feeling when you’re especially hungry and want to eat as much as possible, but your mouth is only so big? Well, some animals don’t have that problem! Unlike humans with our relatively small mouths, certain animals have much larger mouths compared to their heads, allowing them to swallow enormous amounts of food. Take the cormorant in this YouTube video, for example: it somehow manages to gulp down a fish that’s bigger than its entire head!

Meet the Cormorant

A double-crested cormorant sits on a rock sunning, by the St. Clair River in Port Huron, Michigan.

Cormorants dive for fish in freshwater and saltwater.

Cormorants belong to a scientific family of about 40 species of waterbirds known as Phalacrocoracidae. These birds have large bodies, long necks, and small heads. Cormorants are found worldwide, and in North America, the double-crested cormorant (Nannopterum auritum) is the most common and widespread species. In Ireland and Britain, you’ll mainly find the common shag (Gulosus aristotelis) and the great cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo).

Cormorants are mainly black with yellow-orange coloring around their faces and bills. Depending on the species, cormorants typically weigh between 1 and 11 pounds and have a wingspan of 2 to 3 feet. You might spot them swimming low in the water or standing along the shore with their wings spread out as they dry their feathers in the sun. Their feathers aren’t completely waterproof, which helps them dive efficiently, but it also means they need to dry their feathers in the sun to stay warm once they’re out of the water.

The Cormorant’s Preferred Prey

Cormorant feeding

Although they usually spend time in flocks, cormorants also sometimes hunt alone.

Cormorants are excellent divers and exclusively eat fish. They are opportunistic hunters and prefer fish that are easy to catch. They typically hunt small to medium-sized fish, up to 6 inches long, such as perch, sticklebacks, sculpin, trout, herring, minnows, and shad. Occasionally, they will tackle larger prey like eels, pike, and carp. Some cormorants have been spotted trying to swallow eels nearly as long as their own bodies!

Cormorants dive from the water’s surface, propelling themselves underwater with their webbed feet. They usually dive no more than 25 feet deep, though some species can go as deep as 150 feet. On average, a cormorant consumes about 1 pound of fish each day.

Cormorants use their long, hooked bills to grasp their prey. Some will swallow fish underwater, while others bring their catch to the surface to get a better grip.

How Cormorants Tackle Large Fish

Cormorants have many unique adaptations that allow them to swallow fish surprisingly large for their size, including their uniquely designed skull and extra-flexible esophagus.

Uniquely Designed Skulls

Cormorant feeding

Unlike many other birds, cormorants have dense and heavy bones.

Cormorants’ skulls are specially designed for swallowing large fish. They have a bone at the back of their skull called the os nuchale, also known as the occipital style. This bone anchors strong muscles that help them close their lower jaw with greater force. Cormorants’ skulls are also “kinetic,” meaning their upper jaw can move independently from the rest of the skull. This gives them better control over their beak and jaw movements when catching, manipulating, and swallowing fish. In addition, a hinge-like quadrate bone in their skull allows for a much larger range of motion in their mouth when trying to swallow especially large fish.

Flexible Esophagus

Cormorant eating a fish

A group of cormorants is called a “flock” or a “gulp.”

Their trachea (windpipe) and esophagus (food pipe) are positioned to the side of the neck, rather than running straight down the middle. Unlike in reptiles and mammals, the muscles in cormorants do not restrict the movement of these tubes. This allows for much more flexibility when swallowing large fish. It also ensures that the bird’s airway remains clear, preventing suffocation when swallowing larger prey.

The inside of a cormorant’s esophagus is also lined with backward-facing bumps called papillae. These help to grip and guide slippery animals like fish and eels down the bird’s digestive tract.

While smaller fish can be swallowed underwater, larger fish require more leverage, so the cormorant must return to the surface. As shown in the YouTube video, the bird may toss and flip the fish around to position it head-first. This is important because most fish scales point backward, so swallowing the fish head-first allows the scales to slide down smoothly without getting caught.

Once the fish is in the correct position, the cormorant uses a series of coordinated muscle actions to swallow it. Like the bird in the video, cormorants will often toss their head and neck around, using gravity and the fish’s own downward momentum to help swallow it.


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About the Author

Kellianne Matthews

Kellianne Matthews is a writer at A-Z Animals where her primary focus is on anthrozoology, conservation, human-animal relationships, and animal behavior. Kellianne has been researching and writing about animals and the environment for over ten years and has decades of hands-on experience working with a variety of species. She holds a Master’s Degree from Brigham Young University, which she earned in 2017. A resident of Utah, Kellianne enjoys creating, analyzing movies, wrangling her cats, and going on adventures with her husky.

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