Family : Tetraodontidae
Text © Giuseppe Mazza
English translation by Mario Beltramini
The unusual Map puffer (Arothron mappa Lesson, 1831), belongs to the class of the Actinopterygii, the ray-finned fishes, to the order of Tetraodontiformes and to the family of Tetraodontidae, the pufferfish, which counts 26 genera and about 200 species, mostly tropical and marine, but present, at times, also in the fresh and brackish waters.
The name of the genus “arothron”, comes from the Greek “a-”, privative, and “rothron” = nostril. In these fishes, in fact, the nasal tentacles do not have openings, are therefore “without nostrils”, even if, maybe, they have olfactory functions.
The Latin name of the species, “mappa” = napkin, piece of fabric and, by extension, geographical map, refers to the mimetic labyrinthine drawing which seems to almost indicate a pathway.
Zoogeography
The map puffer fish has a vast distribution in the tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific. We find it, indicatively, from South Africa to the Seychelles, Mauritius, Réunion, Maldives and Andaman Islands, in Thailand, Indonesia, Australia, New Guinea, Micronesia, Philippines and Taiwan up to the Ryukyu Islands in the southern part of Japan.
Eastward, it has colonized Samoa and Tonga. Southward, in the Pacific, the Great Barrier Reef and New Caledonia.
Ecology-Habitat
It lives, solitary, in the lagoons and in the coralline formations, in clear and calm waters between the 5 and 30 m of depth.
Morpho-physiology
The relatively elongated body can reach the 65 cm. When in danger, the animal swells swallowing water till it gets, as well befits a puffer fish, an almost spherical shape. The stomach expands enormously whilst a membrane, blocked inside the mouth, seals the mouth.
The fish is of course now unable to swim, but it surprises the aggressor for the sudden change of look and becomes practically elusive, like in the game of biting the apple hanging on a thread.
The skin, protected by poisonous mucus, has no scales. The snout, short, has small mouth with two incisors merged on each jaw, forming a solid beak.
The dorsal and anal fins are set well back, the first counts 11-12 unarmed rays and the second, almost specular, 10-11. The ventral fins are lacking and the pectoral ones, fan-like, have 17-19 rays. The propulsion is entrusted mainly to the ample caudal fin, carried by a robust peduncle. The livery, very variable from one individual to the other, presents some dark spots on pale background. These spots, growing, merge forming drawings similar to a labyrinth which end, close to the eyes, in a characteristic rayed structure.
Ethology-Reproductive Biology
The map puffer fish nourishes of numerous benthic animals, among which the sponges and weeds full of poisonous bacteria. Like many Tetraodontidae, it accumulates in this way, day after day, in the skin, the liver and in the ovaries, a particularly toxic substance, the tetrodotoxin, which causes paralysis, up to block breathing. The predators know well this, and, despite the manipulations done by experienced cooks, every year tens of deaths occur among those who want, at any cost, appreciate its flesh, prized and theoretically edible because the muscles do not contain poison.
For the reproduction, the Arothron mappa digs a hole into the sand where the fecundation takes place. Considering that it is a relatively rare fish, even if the populations decimated by the events may double in 1,4-4,4 years, the fishing vulnerability index is already, unluckily, alarming, being of 46 on a scale of 100.
Synonyms
Tetraodon mappa Lesson, 1831.
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