Arothron manilensis  sign in 


Arothron manilensis - Narrowlined toadfish

Common names |   A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  R  S  T  U  V  X  Y  Z 

latin name: Arothron manilensis, Tetrodon manilensis, Holocanthus pilosus
common name: Narrow - Lined Toadfish, Striped puffer, Narrowlined toadfish

Family: Tetraodontidae
Continent of origin: Australia, Oceania
Origin country: Australia, Philippines, Samoa, Tonga, Japan,
Size: under 31 cm (12.2 inch)
Minimal tank volume: 400 litre (106 US gal)
Temperature: 23 °C (73.4 °F) - 28 °C (82.4 °F)
pH tolerance: 7,5 - 9
Water hardness tolerance: 5 - 20 °dKH
Floor water column: entire water column
Life span: 10 years
Behavior: aggressive toward their own kind
Care level: moderately difficult
Feeding: carnivore -

Similar fish in catalogue: Tetraodon nigroviridis, Tetraodon biocellatus, Tetraodon schoutedeni, Tetraodon mbu, Colomesus psittacus, Tetraodon miurus, Tetraodon lineatus, Colomesus asellus, Carinotetraodon travancoricus, Carinotetraodon lorteti, Carinotetraodon salivator, Canthigaster janthinoptera, Canthigaster rostrata, Canthigaster solandri, Canthigaster valentini, Tetraodon palembangensis, Carinotetraodon imitator, Carinotetraodon irrubesco, Tetraodon cochinchinensis, Tetraodon cutcutia, Tetraodon duboisi, Tetraodon pustulatus, Tetraodon erythrotaenia, Auriglobus modestus , Auriglobus silus, Tetraodon suvatti, Auriglobus amabilis, Auriglobus nefastus, Auriglobus remotus, Carinotetraodon bornnensis, ...

Arothron manilensis is kept in next tanks:

Photos of the Arothron manilensis:

Photograph of the Arothron manilensis is no aviable yet, you can use google search

Summary


Latin name:
Arothron manilensis
Tetrodon manilensis
Holocanthus pilosus
Common name:
Narrowlined toadfish

Family: Tetraodontidae

About fish in catalogue:

added: 1st Oct 2009
updated: 31st Jan 2010
visited: 920 times
profile created by: brova
updated by:
axolotlik, brova, Paja66,


Visitors comments of the Arothron manilensis

+ add new comment


Nobody commented Arothron manilensis for the present.