.
Synonyms:
Tetraodon cutcutia Hamilton, 1822, Fishes of Ganges. p.8.
Tetraodon caria Hamilton, 1822, Fishes of Ganges. p.9-10.
Tetraodon gularis Hamilton, 1822, Fishes of Ganges. p.9-10.
Tetraodon cutcutia Day, 1878, Fishes of India. p.703.
Tetraodon cutcutia Shaw and Shebbeare, 1937, Fishes of Northern Bangal. p.124.
Tetraodon cutcutia Bhuiyan, 1964, Fishes of Dacca. p.120.
Tetraodon cutcutia Qureshi, 1965, Common Freshwater Fishes of Pakistan. p.52.
Monotretus cutcutia Munro, 1955, Marine and Freshwater Fishes of Ceylon. p. 282.
Common name: Ocellated pufferfish
Local name: Tepa, Kutkuitta, Potka
Taxonomy position:
Phylum- Chordata
Class-Oesteichthyes
Order- Tetraodontiformes
Family- Tetraodontidae
Genus- Tetraodon Linnaeus
Fin formula:
D. 10-11; P1. 20-21; P2. Absent; A. 10; C. 7 (Rahman, 2005)
Description of the species:
Broad head and back is tapering abruptly to tail. Mouth opening is a little inferior with two large teeth on each jaw. Gill-openings very reduced and restricted in front of pectoral base. Each nostril forms single orifice situated at end of a very simple short tube. Nostril is nearer to angle of mouth than to anterior margin of eyes. Eyes are large and situated slightly behind middle of head. Dorsal placed well back and above origin of anal. Distance between dorsal origin and anal base equals half the distance between dorsal and posterior edge of the mouth. All fins rounded. Body colour: Greenish yellow above, white in the abdomen. A light band is found between eyes. A large black ocellus is surrounded by a light edge, on the side anterior to the origin of anal fin (Rahman, 1989).
Habit and Habitat:
In ponds, beels, canals, rivers and other water areas throughout the study area (Bhuiyan et al., 1992).
Economic importance:
Market value is high due to its unavailability and test but it is a very poisonous fish specially its breeding season (rainy season).
References:
Bhuiyan, A. L. 1964. Fishes of Dacca. Asiatic Society of Pakistan, Dacca.pp.148.
Bhuiyan, A. S., Islam, M. N. and Hossen, T. 1992. A check list of the fishes of Rajshahi. The Rajshahi University Studies Part-B, Vol-xx, p. 287-306.
Day, F. 1878. Fishes of India, being a natural history of fishes known to inhabit the seas and freshwaters of India, Burma and Ceylon. William Dawson & Sons Ltd., London, Vol. I: 778pp
Hamilton, F., 1822. An account of the fishes found in the river Ganges and its branches, Edinburgh & London, Fishes Ganges, 405 p.
Munro, I. S. 1955. The marine and freshwater fishes of Ceylon. Dept. External affairs. Canbana Publications. XVI+ 340pp.
Qureshi, M. R. 1965. Common Freshwater Fishes of Pakistan. Government of Pakistan Press, Karachi. viii + 61 pp.
Rahman, A.K.A. 1989. Freshwater Fishes of Bangladesh. The Zoological Society of Bangladesh, Department of Zoology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka-1000. 364pp.
Rahman, A.K.A. 2005. Freshwater Fishes of Bangladesh (Second edition). The Zoological Society of Bangladesh, Department of Zoology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka-1000. 394pp.
Shaw and Shebbeare, 1937, The Fishes of Northern Bangal. Journal of Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal Science. p.124.
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