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Bandtail Puffer

Sphoeroides spengleri

The bandtail puffer is a small tropical Atlantic puffer associated with shallow coastal waters and seagrass. It is a hard-toingest, toxin-bearing species that is not a typical target for anglers.

Saltwater
Bandtail Puffer reference image
Andrew David, NOAA/NMFS/SEFSC Panama City; Lance Horn, UNCW/NURC - Phantom II ROV operator., public-domain, via Wikimedia Commons. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Identification points

  • Dark longitudinal band running along the side and a contrasting tail-marked appearance
  • Rounded puffer body with small dorsal and anal fins set far back on the body
  • Small mouth with fused beak-like teeth and a short caudal peduncle

Habitat

Shallow tropical western Atlantic and Caribbean coastal habitats, especially seagrass beds, lagoons, bays, and mangrove edges over sand or mud; often in calm nearshore water.

Bait notes

Rarely targeted. If hooked accidentally, it may take small shrimp, кус of squid, bloodworms, or tiny crustacean baits on light tackle; small soft plastics and bottom fished micro-jigs can also pick it up.

Behavior

Feeds mainly on small benthic invertebrates such as crustaceans, mollusks, and worms, using its beak-like teeth to crush hard prey. Usually cautious and slow-moving, often hovering near bottom cover.

Caution

Do not eat unless you have expert local confirmation; puffers can contain tetrodotoxin, and risk varies by species and region. Its beak-like teeth can also bite fingers when handled.

Fishing notes

Best encountered while fishing very light rigs near grass beds, docks, and shallow bottom structure. Handle carefully and release quickly; it is not a desirable game fish and its body inflation can complicate unhooking.