There are many species of puffer fish. All species live in the water most live in saltwater though there are some species that are brackish and can live in fresh water as well.
There are many fish that mimic other fish for protection. Many types of surgeon fish or tangs as a juvenile mimic different types of large angelfish for protection. There are also a few file fish that mimic the Toby puffer since the puffer is poisonous. Certain types of Cuttle fish mimic the female cuttle fish when they are juveniles to gain the ability to live in a larger male's territory with out being killed or run off.
it depends on the puffer fish they mostly lay lke 3 or 4 eggs I think it 3 or 4 eggs it some times depends on the pufferfish Im prof.caler send me a e-mail at calers@qkstream.com
The largest and most diverse group of fish are the ray-finned fishes. These include many, but to name a few; seahorses, pipefish, puffer-fish and flatfish...etc.
Well... mostly yellow spots, white base, blue splotches with purple markings. They are fat and take 1 year to open.
There are over 200,000 puffer fish
It depends on the type of Puffer Fish. Many lay around 3 or 4 eggs. For more information on Puffer Fish, go to http://pufferfish.ausum.net/
there are 45 diffrent types of fish you can eat
The puffer fish contains enough poison to kill 30 humans .
13
it' has no life cycle
There are as many as 5 to 20 puffer fish that live in a school. This number varies on the location of the puffer fish population and the resources available to them.
all
Many chefs who cook the puffer fish know more than anyone. The puffer fish contains loads of toxic stuff and could kill someone if it wanted to!! I don't think any do. The puffer fish is extremely poisonous.
one thousand
There are many species of puffer fish. All species live in the water most live in saltwater though there are some species that are brackish and can live in fresh water as well.
Yes, there are some types of puffers that live in freshwater but they are not compatible with many fish. what kinds?