They’re back: the biting fish have attacked holidaymakers and swimmers once again on the beaches of Mallorca. The first cases of the summer have been reported this week at Playa de Palma. The incident was reported by a reader of Mallorca Magazine, who is currently on holiday on the island and sustained injuries.
In recent years, there have been repeated reports of fish biting people underwater, most commonly on the legs and feet.
As Axel O. described in an email to the Mallorca Magazine newsroom, he was bitten by several fish twice this week. Both incidents occurred near the Palma Aquarium while the German holidaymaker was in the water. The second incident took place this Thursday, the reader reports: “Today, however, the bite was rather serious and I got out of the water straight away, as it was even bleeding.”

In the past two years in particular, the number of reports of fish bites on the island has increased. Cases have been recorded not only on the beaches around Palma, but also in other parts of the archipelago, such as Sa Ràpita, S'Estanyol, Cala Pi, and Cala d'Or.
In an interview with MM two years ago, marine biologist Silvia García from the international environmental protection organisation Oceana stated that biting incidents were rarely the result of attacks by adult fish. “They are usually juvenile fish, only a few days or weeks old, so small and transparent that they are barely visible in the water,” the expert explained.
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TwinkleTopsThat would require submersion.
I had the same experience last summer in Igoumenitsa Greece, just wading out and a sudden nipping by these fish, thankfully they are small and sent the size of piranhas.
'Most often in the legs and feet' - now that is a surprise! Most of us would think it would be behind the ears or even the tip of the nose.