Takifugu, also known by the Japanese name, is a genus of pufferfish with 25 species, most of which are native to salt and brackish waters of the northwest Pacific, but a few species are found in freshwater in Asia or more widely in the Indo-Pacific region. Their diet consists mostly of algae, molluscs, invertebrates and sometimes crustaceans.
The fish contains lethal amounts of the poison tetrodotoxin in the internal organs, especially the liver and the ovaries, but also in the skin and the testes. The poison paralyzes the muscles while the victim stays fully conscious, and eventually dies from asphyxiation. There is currently no antidote, and the standard medical approach is to try to support the respiratory and circulatory system until the effect of the poison wears off.
There are 25 species belonging to the genus Takifugu. Most species are restricted to salt and brackish waters of the northwest Pacific, but a few occur more widely in the Indo-Pacific region or in freshwater of Asia. Although several are euryhaline (can adapt to various salinities) to some extent, most are unable to live in freshwater. Two exceptions are the anadromous Takifugu obscurus and the Takifugu ocellatus, which lives in coastal marine waters but migrates into fresh water to spawn in rivers.[1]
Most species in the genus are not considered threatened, but there are two notable exceptions: the critically endangered Takifugu chinensis and the endangered Takifugu plagiocellatus.[2] [3]
Takifugu rubripes serves as a model organism in biological research.[4]
Not all Takifugu have been studied in detail, but the most researched species is Takifugu rubripes, due to the commercial farming of this fish for human consumption. Takifugu rubripes, for example, breeds from March to May and lays eggs attached to rocks at a depth of around . As far as known, most species live exclusively in marine and brackish water, also breeding in this habitat. The anadromous Takifugu obscurus migrates from its coastal marine habitat into fresh water to spawn. An even more exceptional and unique breeding behavior is displayed by Takifugu niphobles. They gather in groups at certain beaches, throw themselves onto land where fertilization happens and then return to the water.[5] [6] The eggs either float back into the water or may stay on land under rocks for a period, only hatching when again submerged by high tide.[7] This breeding behavior is unique among pufferfish, but found in a few other unrelated fish like capelin and grunion.[8]
Fugu can also change color over time. This helps them to camouflage.[9]
The fish's main defense is the neurotoxin contained in its internal organs, mainly the ovaries and the liver, to a lesser extent in the intestines and the skin, and only minute amounts in the muscles and blood. This makes the fugu a lethal meal for most predators, including the occasional human.
The toxin is called tetrodotoxin, or more precisely anhydrotetrodotoxin 4-epitetrodotoxin and is about 1200 times deadlier than cyanide. This poison can also be found in other animals such as the blue-ringed octopus, cone snails, and even some newts. The pufferfish does not create the poison itself; rather it is generated by bacteria e.g. Pseudomonas within the fish.[10] The fish obtains the bacteria by eating food containing these bacteria. Pufferfish that are born and grown in captivity do not produce tetrodotoxin until they receive some of the poison-producing bacteria, often by eating tissues from a toxin-producing fish. Also, some fish are more poisonous than others. Each fish has enough poison to kill around thirty adult humans.
Apparently due to some unknown selection pressure, intronic and extragenic sequences have been drastically reduced within this family. As a result, they have the smallest-known genomes yet found amongst the vertebrate animals, while containing a genetic repertoire very similar to other fishes and thus comparable to vertebrates generally. Since these genomes are relatively compact it is relatively fast and inexpensive to compile their complete sequences, as has been done for two species of pufferfishes (Takifugu rubripes and Tetraodon nigroviridis). The former species was the second vertebrate in history to have its genome mapped, after humans.[11]
, there are 25 recognized species in the genus Takifugu:
Image | Species | Author | Common name | Distribution | Max. size | Comments | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Takifugu alboplumbeus | J. Richardson, 1845 | Komon-damashi (Japan) | West Pacific | 23cm (09inches) SL | Poisonous, Salt Water | ||
Takifugu bimaculatus | J. Richardson, 1845 | Futatsuboshi-fugu (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | 30cm (10inches) SL | Poisonous | ||
Takifugu chinensis | T. Abe, 1949 | Eyespot Puffer, Karasu (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | 55cm (22inches) SL | Poisonous | ||
Takifugu chrysops | Hilgendorf, 1879 | Red-eyed Puffer, Akamefugu (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu coronoidus | Y. Ni & C. S. Li, 1992 | zh|暈環多紀魨 (China) | Northwest Pacific | ? | Not poisonous? | ||
Takifugu exascurus | D. S. Jordan & Snyder, 1901 | Mushifugu (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | 15cm (06inches) SL | Poisonous | ||
Takifugu flavidus | C. S. Li?, C. X. Wang & Y. G. Wang, 1975 | Yellowbelly pufferfish, Towny puffer, Sansaifugu (Japan), Hwang-jom-pok (Korea), Jú húng dong fang tún (China) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu niphobles | D. S. Jordan & Snyder, 1901 | Grass Puffer, Starry puffer, Kusafugu (Japan), Cá Nóc sao (Viet Nam) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu oblongus | Bloch, 1786 | Oblong blowfish, Lattice blaasop (India), Bebo (India) Buntal (Malaysia), Pita-pita (Indonesia), Ruitjies-blaasop (South Africa) | West Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu obscurus | T. Abe, 1949 | Obscure Puffer, Mefugu (Japan) | Western Pacific | 40cm (20inches) SL | Poisonous | ||
Takifugu ocellatus | Linnaeus, 1758 | Ocellated Puffer | Asia | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu orbimaculatus | Y. D. Kuang, C. S. Li & S. H. Liang, 1984 | Chinese: 圓斑多紀魨 (China) | Asia | ? | Not Poisonous? | ||
Takifugu pardalis | Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 | Panther puffer, Higanfugu (Japan), Chol-pok (Korea), Bào wén dong fang tún (China) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu plagiocellatus | C. S. Li, 2002 | Northwest Pacific, China | |||||
Takifugu poecilonotus | Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 | Fine Patterned Puffer, Komonfugu (Japan), Huin-jom-pok (Korea), Ban dian dong fang tún (斑点东方鲀) (China) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu porphyreus | Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 | Purple Puffer, Namera-fugu (Japan), Mafugu (Japan), Kom-pok (Korea), Zi sè dong fang tún) (China) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu pseudommus | Y. T. Chu, 1935 | Nameradafugu (Japan), Nameradamashi (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu radiatus | T. Abe, 1947 | Nashifugu (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | 20cm (10inches) SL | Poisonous | ||
Takifugu reticularis | M. C. Tian, Q. T. Cheng & Q. Wang, 1975 | Reticulate Puffer, Amime-fugu (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu rubripes | Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 | Torafugu (Japan), Japanese Puffer, Tiger Puffer, Hóng qí dong fang tún(红鳍东方鲀) (China), Cha-ju-pok (Korea) | Northwest Pacific | 80cm (30inches) TL | Poisonous, Used in Chinese Medicine, Genome sequenced completely | ||
Takifugu snyderi | T. Abe, 1988 | Shosai-fugu (Japan) | Western Pacific | 30cm (10inches) SL | Poisonous | ||
Takifugu stictonotus | Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 | Spotback, Spottyback Puffer, Gomafugu (Japan) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu variomaculatus | C. S. Li & Y. D. Kuang, 2002 | Northwest Pacific, China | |||||
Takifugu vermicularis | Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 | Purple Puffer, Pear Puffer, Shosaifugu (Japan), Nashifugu (Japan), Kuk-mae-ri-bok (Korea), Chóng wén dong fang tún (China) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous | |||
Takifugu xanthopterus | Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 | Yellowfin puffer, Shimafugu (Japan), Kka-ch'i-pok (Korea), Tiáo wén dong fang tún (China) | Northwest Pacific | Poisonous |