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Fauna · Sundarbans Mangrove Forest, Khulna Division, BD

Mudskipper Display — Sundarbans Mangrove Bangladesh

The mudskipper (Boleophthalmus boddarti and Periophthalmus species) of the Sundarbans mangrove system are the world's most terrestrial fish — spending most of their time out of water, breathing atmospheric oxygen through their skin and gill chambers, climbing mangrove roots, and performing extraordinary courtship displays in which males excavate nest burrows and leap vertically up to 60 centimetres to attract females. The tidal mudflats exposed at low tide in the Sundarbans support mudskipper populations of hundreds per hectare, and a river journey at low tide on the Bangladesh side of the Sundarbans reveals a mudflat surface animated by hundreds of simultaneously displaying and feeding mudskippers, their pectoral-fin 'crutch-walking' gait and the synchronised courtship leaping creating one of the mangrove ecosystem's most visually arresting scenes. The Sundarbans' tiger population adds a background of wildness to what would otherwise be purely a fish-behaviour observation.

When
Oct — Apr, peak Nov — Mar
Best viewing
A low-tide river journey through the Sundarbans reveals mudflats animated by hundreds of crutch-walking, leaping mudskippers performing courtship displays — an otherworldly scene of fish behaving like land animals.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Jan 2027

About this spectacle

At low tide on the Bangladesh side of the Sundarbans, vast mudflats emerge from the waterways and come alive with mudskippers. Boleophthalmus boddarti and Periophthalmus species emerge by the hundreds per hectare, their bulging eyes swivelling independently as they crutch-walk across the glistening mud on stiffened pectoral fins. Males excavate burrow entrances and then launch themselves vertically — up to 60 centimetres into the humid mangrove air — in synchronised courtship leaps that ripple across the flat in waves. The sounds are subtle: soft thuds as bodies land on wet mud, the occasional splash. Colours are earthy and iridescent, with blue-flecked dorsal fins fanning open during displays. The tangled prop roots of the mangroves frame the scene, and somewhere beyond the riverbank tigers move unseen through the forest, lending the entire setting an electric sense of wilderness. A boat journey along the tidal channels puts visitors at eye level with this extraordinary spectacle of fish that have, in effect, colonised dry land.

When to go

Oct — Apr, peak Nov — Mar

Getting there

Nearest airport: ZYL. Nearest city: Khulna.

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