Ringed Puffer
Omegophora armilla
Ringed Puffer (Omegophora armilla) is a small, poorly documented pufferfish known from occurrence records rather than extensive life-history studies. Like other puffers, it has a stout body and can inflate when threatened; exact range, habitat, and diet are not well resolved in the literature.
Identification points
- Small, rounded puffer body with a blunt snout
- Distinct dark ring or band-like marking around the body, reflected in the common name
- Typical puffer features: beak-like fused teeth and smooth skin without obvious scales
Habitat
Specific habitat is poorly documented; occurrence records suggest a marine coastal puffer associated with continental-shelf waters, likely near reefs, rocky areas, or other structured bottom habitats.
Bait notes
Not a targeted game species. If encountered by anglers, small bottom baits such as shrimp, squid, or cut bait may hook it incidentally on light tackle.
Behavior
Behavior is not well studied. As a pufferfish, it likely forages slowly on small benthic invertebrates and can inflate when stressed or handled.
Caution
Do not eat unless local authority guidance confirms it is safe; puffers can contain tetrodotoxin. Also avoid handling carelessly because inflated puffers can be hard to unhook and may damage tackle.
Fishing notes
Best approached as a bycatch species; fish near structure on light bottom rigs if documenting local occurrence. Handle carefully and release promptly if not retained under local rules.