Hello. I've kept a porcupine puffer for a long time. It's healthy, happy etc.Then I've bought a bigger tank, and decided to add another porc. Done. The small one was introduced to new tank first, then the old one. They accepted each other, swim together, beg for food, the smaller one slept on the bigger one's back. All was good. Half of a year passed.
Now the spring came, the tank temperature raised and the bigger one suddenly started to chase the smaller one. No harm, no bites, no attacks, just chasing and pressing the smaller one down to the sand and rocks. The smaller puffer seems stressed and pale. Like it does not understand what the bigger one wants. The tank is divided now, but both puffers keep looking to each other through the plastic "wall", where one swims, another tries to. No matter it is the big one or the smaller one. Both even tried to stagger the divider. The bigger one even jumped above it a few times. If divider is removed, the chase begins again. This picture is from Sep. 2018
Porc behavior
- spamer80
- Puffer Fry
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- My Puffers: Nigroviridis, Dwarf, Colomessus, Porcupine.
- Location (country): Russia
- Location: Saint-Petersburg, Russia
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Porc behavior
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- Pufferpunk
- Queen Admin
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Re: Porc behavior
Sounds like mating behavior between a sexually mature fish & a juvie. Glad you separated them!
You are getting sleepy... you only hear the sound of my voice... you must do water changes... water changes... water changes... water changes...
"The solution to pollution is dilution!"
"The solution to pollution is dilution!"