Brackish

Puffer

More details

Green Spotted Puffer (Dichotomyctere nigroviridis)

Pro

Pro

Description

Known for its vibrant lime-green body with dark spots, the Green Spotted Puffer is a high-intelligence, high-maintenance fish that transitions from freshwater to full marine as it matures. Ideal for experienced aquarists who enjoy personality-packed fish with complex care needs.

Difficulty Level

Intermediate Care

Region

Green Spotted Puffer (Dichotomyctere nigroviridis)

Core Details

Highlights

Care Level

0

/ 10

Requires species-only setups, shifting salinity needs, and precise water chemistry. Not beginner-friendly.

Environment Impact

0

/ 10

Often wild-caught but increasingly available through captive breeding; needs careful tank planning due to aggression and ecological footprint.

Origin
Native to South and Southeast Asia, especially in estuarine and coastal regions of India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Indonesia. Found in mangrove swamps and slow-moving tidal rivers.

Visual & Behavioral Appeal
Sporting an electric green topcoat with irregular black spots and a white to yellowish belly, this pufferfish is stunning and bold. It has independently moving eyes and curious, investigative swimming behavior. Known for its intelligence—it can recognize its keeper and interact actively at feeding time.

Purpose
Primarily kept as a display or solo specimen. Due to its aggression, it’s not a community fish. It controls snail populations and displays fascinating behavior, making it a lively centerpiece in species-only aquaria.

Importance
An excellent species for aquarists seeking a challenge or studying brackish-to-marine transitions. Its care demands promote advanced understanding of aquatic chemistry and habitat replication.

Included Resources
Requires a spacious tank, brackish-to-marine water stability, hard decor for algae grazing, and enriched feeding routines. A lid is essential—they may jump. Filtration must handle high bio-load.

Best Use Cases
Ideal for large brackish setups with robust filtration, educational biotope displays, and solo or puffer-only species tanks. Not suited for planted community tanks or peaceful freshwater environments.

Conservation Context
Vulnerable in parts of its range due to habitat destruction in mangroves and pollution. Keeping this species successfully encourages awareness of estuarine conservation and mangrove importance.

Ideal Tankmates
• Best kept alone or with other large puffers (in very large systems)
• Avoid shrimp, snails, and peaceful fish—will attack or consume them
• Possible tankmates: Monos, Scats, larger archerfish (in marine phase)

Region (A)
• Latitude: 8.5241° N
• Longitude: 76.9366° E
(Kerala backwaters, India)

Region (B)
• Latitude: 1.3521° N
• Longitude: 103.8198° E
(Singapore estuarine and mangrove zones)

How Many Can I Keep?

Get smart stocking suggestions based on your tank size.

e.g. 75 gallons (280 L)

Green Spotted Puffer (Dichotomyctere nigroviridis)

Core Details

Highlights

Care Level

0

/ 10

Requires species-only setups, shifting salinity needs, and precise water chemistry. Not beginner-friendly.

Environment Impact

0

/ 10

Often wild-caught but increasingly available through captive breeding; needs careful tank planning due to aggression and ecological footprint.

Origin
Native to South and Southeast Asia, especially in estuarine and coastal regions of India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Indonesia. Found in mangrove swamps and slow-moving tidal rivers.

Visual & Behavioral Appeal
Sporting an electric green topcoat with irregular black spots and a white to yellowish belly, this pufferfish is stunning and bold. It has independently moving eyes and curious, investigative swimming behavior. Known for its intelligence—it can recognize its keeper and interact actively at feeding time.

Purpose
Primarily kept as a display or solo specimen. Due to its aggression, it’s not a community fish. It controls snail populations and displays fascinating behavior, making it a lively centerpiece in species-only aquaria.

Importance
An excellent species for aquarists seeking a challenge or studying brackish-to-marine transitions. Its care demands promote advanced understanding of aquatic chemistry and habitat replication.

Included Resources
Requires a spacious tank, brackish-to-marine water stability, hard decor for algae grazing, and enriched feeding routines. A lid is essential—they may jump. Filtration must handle high bio-load.

Best Use Cases
Ideal for large brackish setups with robust filtration, educational biotope displays, and solo or puffer-only species tanks. Not suited for planted community tanks or peaceful freshwater environments.

Conservation Context
Vulnerable in parts of its range due to habitat destruction in mangroves and pollution. Keeping this species successfully encourages awareness of estuarine conservation and mangrove importance.

Ideal Tankmates
• Best kept alone or with other large puffers (in very large systems)
• Avoid shrimp, snails, and peaceful fish—will attack or consume them
• Possible tankmates: Monos, Scats, larger archerfish (in marine phase)

Region (A)
• Latitude: 8.5241° N
• Longitude: 76.9366° E
(Kerala backwaters, India)

Region (B)
• Latitude: 1.3521° N
• Longitude: 103.8198° E
(Singapore estuarine and mangrove zones)

How Many Can I Keep?

Get smart stocking suggestions based on your tank size.

e.g. 75 gallons (280 L)

Green Spotted Puffer (Dichotomyctere nigroviridis)

Core Details

Highlights

Care Level

0

/ 10

Requires species-only setups, shifting salinity needs, and precise water chemistry. Not beginner-friendly.

Environment Impact

0

/ 10

Often wild-caught but increasingly available through captive breeding; needs careful tank planning due to aggression and ecological footprint.

Origin
Native to South and Southeast Asia, especially in estuarine and coastal regions of India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Indonesia. Found in mangrove swamps and slow-moving tidal rivers.

Visual & Behavioral Appeal
Sporting an electric green topcoat with irregular black spots and a white to yellowish belly, this pufferfish is stunning and bold. It has independently moving eyes and curious, investigative swimming behavior. Known for its intelligence—it can recognize its keeper and interact actively at feeding time.

Purpose
Primarily kept as a display or solo specimen. Due to its aggression, it’s not a community fish. It controls snail populations and displays fascinating behavior, making it a lively centerpiece in species-only aquaria.

Importance
An excellent species for aquarists seeking a challenge or studying brackish-to-marine transitions. Its care demands promote advanced understanding of aquatic chemistry and habitat replication.

Included Resources
Requires a spacious tank, brackish-to-marine water stability, hard decor for algae grazing, and enriched feeding routines. A lid is essential—they may jump. Filtration must handle high bio-load.

Best Use Cases
Ideal for large brackish setups with robust filtration, educational biotope displays, and solo or puffer-only species tanks. Not suited for planted community tanks or peaceful freshwater environments.

Conservation Context
Vulnerable in parts of its range due to habitat destruction in mangroves and pollution. Keeping this species successfully encourages awareness of estuarine conservation and mangrove importance.

Ideal Tankmates
• Best kept alone or with other large puffers (in very large systems)
• Avoid shrimp, snails, and peaceful fish—will attack or consume them
• Possible tankmates: Monos, Scats, larger archerfish (in marine phase)

Region (A)
• Latitude: 8.5241° N
• Longitude: 76.9366° E
(Kerala backwaters, India)

Region (B)
• Latitude: 1.3521° N
• Longitude: 103.8198° E
(Singapore estuarine and mangrove zones)

How Many Can I Keep?

Get smart stocking suggestions based on your tank size.

e.g. 75 gallons (280 L)

Green Spotted Puffer (Dichotomyctere nigroviridis)

Region

Drag and orbit around the species’ natural range.

Drag to rotate and discover where this species originates in the world.

Drag to rotate and discover where this species originates in the world.

People also like…

Toothpick Fish (Indostomus paradoxus)

Toothpick Fish (Indostomus paradoxus)
Toothpick Fish (Indostomus paradoxus)
A close-up image of an alligator snapping turtle with a rugged shell and powerful jaws, captured against a plain white background.

Mata Mata Turtle (Chelus fimbriata)

Mata Mata Turtle (Chelus fimbriata)
Mata Mata Turtle (Chelus fimbriata)
A realistic, brown tortoise figurine with a textured shell and detailed facial features, set against a plain white background.

African Side-neck Turtle (Pelomedusa subrufa)

African Side-neck Turtle (Pelomedusa subrufa)
African Side-neck Turtle (Pelomedusa subrufa)
A brown turtle with a textured shell and scaly legs is standing on a white background, looking forward attentively.

West African Mud Turtle (Pelusios castaneus)

West African Mud Turtle (Pelusios castaneus)
West African Mud Turtle (Pelusios castaneus)
A softshell turtle with a long neck and distinctive patterned shell is positioned against a plain, neutral background, showcasing its textured skin and unique markings.

Softshell Turtle (Apalone ferox, Apalone spinifera, Apalone mutica)

Softshell Turtle (Apalone ferox, Apalone spinifera, Apalone mutica)
Softshell Turtle (Apalone ferox, Apalone spinifera, Apalone mutica)
A brown snapping turtle with textured skin and a hard shell stands on a plain white background, showcasing its rugged, prehistoric appearance.

Common Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpentina)

Common Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpentina)
Common Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpentina)