It depends entirely on which pufferfish species and which jellyfish species is being considered. There are both non-poisonous pufferfishes and jellyfishes and mortally poisonous pufferfishes and jellyfishes, as well as numerous different intermediates.
The box jellyfish is the most venomous; the arrow frog the most poisonous. Poisonous and venomous are not the same thing.
Well one is a stone fish another is a cone snail. Another is a box jellyfish. Also there is even a venomous shark. That would be the spiny dogfish There are also more fish like the lion fish and scorpion fish.
There are a few different fish species named Sunfish the ones that live in the ocean live in the rockier more cavernous areas and eat jellyfish and 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/
Puffer fish have excellent eyesight, and more importantly, they are able to manoeuvre their eyes independently of each other.
Puffer fish will eat fins before anything. lol. they like bloodworm and more carnivorous foods.
Puffer fish and blowfish are two common names for the same group of fish species belonging to the family Tetraodontidae. These fish are known for their ability to puff up by ingesting water or air to deter predators. The term "puffer fish" is more commonly used, while "blowfish" is sometimes used to refer specifically to the Japanese puffer fish species Fugu.
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.
A pufferfish is a carnivore. Here is some more facts about puffer fish. They have to eat hard shelled animals to survive. For instance snail or a crab.
Puffer fish do not have measurable IQ levels as intelligence tests are designed for mammals. Puffer fish are known for their unique capabilities such as inflating themselves as a defense mechanism and creating intricate sand patterns.
There are more than 100 species of puffer fish living throughout the temperate waters of India, and the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. They live in the coral reefs of these oceans.
I would need more details, but Tetraodon suvatii comes to mind. It is commonly sold as the pig-nose puffer, arrowhead puffer, Mekong puffer, or hog-nose puffer.