Home · Diodontidae · Blow up
Blow up (Diodon nicthemerus) — Diodontidae

Blow up

Diodon nicthemerus
Family: Diodontidae

The Blow up (Diodon nicthemerus) is a saltwater fish of the family Diodontidae that grows up to 40 cm.

Length
40 cm
Water
Saltwater
Depth
1.0–70.0 m
Diet
Carnivore
Behaviour
Small groups
Activity
Nocturnal
Body shape
Flat / disc-shaped
Substrate
Stone or rock
Danger
Venomous / poisonous
Edibility
Not eaten

Description

The slender-spined porcupinefish is a porcupinefish of the family Diodontidae from the temperate waters around southern Australia. The species grows to about 40 cm and has a stocky, yellow-brown body set with numerous long, slender spines. When threatened it inflates itself with water into a spiny ball, raising the spines and deterring predators. It is common in shallow bays and is nocturnal. With its strong beak-like fused jaw plates it crushes hard-shelled prey such as molluscs, crabs and sea urchins. Like related porcupine and pufferfishes it can contain tetrodotoxin; therefore do not eat this fish.

Frequently asked questions

How do you recognise the Blow up?

The Blow up has a flattened, disc-shaped body, is mainly brown and shows a spots pattern.

Where does the Blow up live?

The Blow up lives in the sea (marine waters) and is mostly found around stony or rocky ground.

How big does the Blow up get?

The Blow up grows to a maximum of about 40 cm.

Is the Blow up dangerous to humans?

The Blow up is venomous — handle spines with care and seek medical help after a sting if needed.

Is the Blow up edible?

The Blow up is not usually eaten.

Download Fin's Fish Guide

Identify fish in seconds, log your catches and dives. Join the TestFlight beta.

Get the beta →

All data

Identification

Dutch name
Slankstekel-egelvis sourced
English name
Blow up verified
Scientific name
Diodon nicthemerus
Family
Diodontidae
Other names
Globe fish; Slender-spined porcupine fish verified

Appearance

Size class
Medium verified
Max length (cm)
40.0 verified
Body shape
Flat / disc-shaped sourced
Dominant colour
Brown inferred
Pattern
Spots inferred
Tail shape
Rounded inferred
Mouth position
Terminal inferred
Lips
Thick / fleshy inferred
Barbels
No sourced
Dorsal fins
One continuous inferred
Dorsal spines
No sourced

Habitat & distribution

Water type
Saltwater sourced
Substrate
Stone or rock sourced
Min depth (m)
1.0 verified
Max depth (m)
70.0 verified
Origin
Native sourced

Behaviour & biology

Diet
Carnivore sourced
Social behaviour
Small groups inferred
Territorial
No inferred
Activity
Nocturnal inferred
Reproduction
Separate sexes sourced
Sexual dimorphism
No inferred

For anglers

Edibility
Not eaten sourced
Fishing method
Vissen met natuurlijk aas (vis, garnaal, worm) of kunstaas dicht bij rif- en rotsstructuren. inferred
Regulations source
FishBase ↗ inferred

Safety

Danger to humans
Venomous / poisonous sourced

Status & sources

Sources
FishBase via GBIF (DwC-A), CC-BY-NC 4.0

Same genus Diodon

More from the family Diodontidae

Download Fin's Fish Guide

Identify fish in seconds, log your catches and dives. Join the TestFlight beta.

Get the beta →