Knighthunter
Senior Member
It takes me a good couple minutes to find fact about blowie after reading blowfish floating up due blowing itself with air since I am not animal expert, it turn it's completely misleading statement.
Blowie ingested water to blow itself underwater and it ingest air when it was put outside water. If the blowie floating to surface due ingested air underwater it must be the diver force the regulator into blowie it to blow it up. That's what I call cruel man!
Source taken from Wiki:
The puffer's unique and distinctive natural defenses help compensate for their slow locomotion. Puffers move by combining pectoral, dorsal, anal, and caudal fins. This makes them highly maneuverable but very slow, and therefore comparatively easy predation targets. Their primary defense mechanism is to fill their extremely elastic stomachs with water (or air when outside the water) until they are much larger and almost spherical in shape. A hungry predator may suddenly find itself facing what seems to be a much larger fish and pause, giving the puffer an opportunity to retreat to safety. Out of water there is a risk that puffers inflate with air. This may result in injection with tetrodotoxin, making them an unpleasant, possibly lethal, meal for any predator. This neurotoxin is found primarily in the ovaries and liver, although smaller amounts exist in the intestines and skin, as well as trace amounts in muscle as larger fish, but it can kill humans.
Blowie ingested water to blow itself underwater and it ingest air when it was put outside water. If the blowie floating to surface due ingested air underwater it must be the diver force the regulator into blowie it to blow it up. That's what I call cruel man!
Source taken from Wiki:
The puffer's unique and distinctive natural defenses help compensate for their slow locomotion. Puffers move by combining pectoral, dorsal, anal, and caudal fins. This makes them highly maneuverable but very slow, and therefore comparatively easy predation targets. Their primary defense mechanism is to fill their extremely elastic stomachs with water (or air when outside the water) until they are much larger and almost spherical in shape. A hungry predator may suddenly find itself facing what seems to be a much larger fish and pause, giving the puffer an opportunity to retreat to safety. Out of water there is a risk that puffers inflate with air. This may result in injection with tetrodotoxin, making them an unpleasant, possibly lethal, meal for any predator. This neurotoxin is found primarily in the ovaries and liver, although smaller amounts exist in the intestines and skin, as well as trace amounts in muscle as larger fish, but it can kill humans.
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