New puffer owners seeking advice
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2023 12:59 pm
Don't even think about putting this in the brackish forum, this species is straight saltwater.
I was down in Cape Canaveral this weekend and I saw a ton of dead puffers just smashed on the ground. Apparently some people think it's hilarious to catch hundreds of these guys, toss 'em on the ground, and let 'em suffocate. Then for kicks, they drive over 'em with their cars. I was livid. I scooped up a couple "fresh ones" and threw 'em in my tank. Both are Southern Puffers (Sphoeroides nephelus), a saltwater/high-end brackish species. They're eating, but one's just lying around way more. They love burrowing, so that's probably it. I need some advice here. I'm only keeping one, the other's going to my LFS. I'm planning to add more sand, but I've got a bad feeling something's gonna go wrong. They're about 8 inches each, in a 75-gallon brackish tank with a 90-gallon filter. I really want this rescue to work out.
I was down in Cape Canaveral this weekend and I saw a ton of dead puffers just smashed on the ground. Apparently some people think it's hilarious to catch hundreds of these guys, toss 'em on the ground, and let 'em suffocate. Then for kicks, they drive over 'em with their cars. I was livid. I scooped up a couple "fresh ones" and threw 'em in my tank. Both are Southern Puffers (Sphoeroides nephelus), a saltwater/high-end brackish species. They're eating, but one's just lying around way more. They love burrowing, so that's probably it. I need some advice here. I'm only keeping one, the other's going to my LFS. I'm planning to add more sand, but I've got a bad feeling something's gonna go wrong. They're about 8 inches each, in a 75-gallon brackish tank with a 90-gallon filter. I really want this rescue to work out.