jonny bolt
Member
It is a Valentini. And it puffed before it was removed from the water, not after. I attribute this to that I caught him while sleeping. And I used a plastic specimen container to capture the fish. I would rather go about it this way, than chase the fish around a 72 gallon tank, while it thrashes, smashes, wipes out, contorts, and pounds itself off of every obstacle in the tank. The fish was FAR less beat up the way I did it than it could've been. I have seen Puffers jump straight out of tanks and land on the floor because of people chasing them around tanks with nets. If my fishes best interests were not on my mind, I wouldnt even bother trying to help.
Which brings me to why I have to sit here and defend myself, because of a few cantankerous members who see it fit to judge others and immediately add arrogant, smug, condescending comments to start off their replies. It seems to almost be a past-time here.
"Am I missing something here? Why is it funny that you are purposely stressing out your puffer unneccessarily? I would hope that you know this is bad for the fish."
This was your very first paragraph, a (smug) assumption and (condescending) comment. You throw it in there as a "jab", like nobody will notice. Why is it funny that I am purposely stressing my fish out? I told you, I am not purposely stressing my fish out. It happened, and I just happened to have the camera in arms reach. A lucky shot. Maybe use it for the purpose of study, instead of the purpose of whining and puling. I posted the pics knowing FULL WELL that atleast one of the SW Peanut Gallery & Marine Fish Patrol would come in and piss on the parade
I will continue to treat the fish, if it dies, it dies. The world isnt going to cave in or crack in half. Nature will take its course, and I wont WHINE about it.
But since you are the judge and jury, are perfect, and have never stressed a fish out and/or lost a fish, I have already invited you to come help with the process
I'd also like to respectfully disagree with a statement above that puffers dont puff up for nothing. My friend has the same fish, and it has been in the same tank for almost 31 months straight, with the same number of fish. Never any disease, never a lost fish. We started recording fish behavior after the tank was up for 6 months to the day. It seems his Puffer will "test" his "puffing ability" every so often, because it is done between every 120-140 days. Quite a weird phenomenon. It's as if the fish has been in such a comfortable and stable environment, that it feels the need, almost on a schedule, to "test" its natural defense mechanism, to make sure it still works. Very interesting what you can learn and witness from fish, especially when you study them over a long period of time.
Anyway, gotta go, my Puff is hungry and PETA is ringing my phone off tha hook
Which brings me to why I have to sit here and defend myself, because of a few cantankerous members who see it fit to judge others and immediately add arrogant, smug, condescending comments to start off their replies. It seems to almost be a past-time here.
"Am I missing something here? Why is it funny that you are purposely stressing out your puffer unneccessarily? I would hope that you know this is bad for the fish."
This was your very first paragraph, a (smug) assumption and (condescending) comment. You throw it in there as a "jab", like nobody will notice. Why is it funny that I am purposely stressing my fish out? I told you, I am not purposely stressing my fish out. It happened, and I just happened to have the camera in arms reach. A lucky shot. Maybe use it for the purpose of study, instead of the purpose of whining and puling. I posted the pics knowing FULL WELL that atleast one of the SW Peanut Gallery & Marine Fish Patrol would come in and piss on the parade
But since you are the judge and jury, are perfect, and have never stressed a fish out and/or lost a fish, I have already invited you to come help with the process
I'd also like to respectfully disagree with a statement above that puffers dont puff up for nothing. My friend has the same fish, and it has been in the same tank for almost 31 months straight, with the same number of fish. Never any disease, never a lost fish. We started recording fish behavior after the tank was up for 6 months to the day. It seems his Puffer will "test" his "puffing ability" every so often, because it is done between every 120-140 days. Quite a weird phenomenon. It's as if the fish has been in such a comfortable and stable environment, that it feels the need, almost on a schedule, to "test" its natural defense mechanism, to make sure it still works. Very interesting what you can learn and witness from fish, especially when you study them over a long period of time.
Anyway, gotta go, my Puff is hungry and PETA is ringing my phone off tha hook