valentini ???

salt nate

Member
do valentini puffers only eat shrimp and not corals? will it mess with a coral banded shrimp?
I have mushrooms, ricordea, kenya tree, toadstool leather, and star polyps. clown, foxface, six line wrasse, flame angel, pygmy angel in a 75 gallon tank with a 10 gallon refugium and 5 gal sump.
 

florida joe

Well-Known Member
The Saddle Valentini Puffer, also known as the Black Saddle Pufferfish, Blacksaddled Toby, Valentini Toby, or Saddled Toby. Members of the Canthigaster genus are called Sharp-nosed Puffers or Tobies. The Saddle Valentini Puffer is a bright and colorful fish with dark brown bands across the midsection, brownish-orange spotting on the lower half, yellow fins, and blue striping running along the back. It lacks pelvic fins, but has learned to use the pectoral fins to move about the aquarium.
A 30 gallon or larger, fish-only aquarium is suitable. It will fight with conspecifics such as the filefish, large finned fish, and other tobies. It may be aggressive at times, nipping the fins of tank mates, leaving a circular hole as its mark. It will also eat invertebrates found in a reef tank. Its teeth are actually a fused beak-like structure.
Parts of its flesh are poisonous. It has the ability, when threatened or alarmed, to inflate its body to almost twice its normal size. It becomes alarmed when netted, therefore, use a container to transfer it.
The Saddle Valentini Puffer needs a varied diet of meaty foods including; squid, krill, clams, and hard shelled shrimp to help wear down their ever growing teeth,
It is also said that it can not be trusted with corals
 

stanlalee

Active Member
well real world experiece is it depends (on specimen and size). when I had one it didn't bother my fire shrimp OR snails and hermits. are algae sheets side by side. it was small and not likely able to eat them if it wanted to. Just TODAY in the petstore I saw one trying to get underneath a large turbo snail (unsuccessfully). As for corals mine left alone mushrooms, zooanthid, hammer ect. It did not leave meaty sps alone. put little circle damage in them in fact. If you really want one in a reef a) buy small which is easy since they almost always come small and b) see what corals they have an afinity for if any and learn to live without those corals it likes. same goes for mobile inverts.

 
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