Lagocephalus sceleratus


Lagocephalus sceleratus, commonly known as the silver-cheeked toadfish, is an extremely poisonous marine bony fish in the family Tetraodontidae.

Habitat and distribution

The species is common in the tropical waters of the Indian and Pacific oceans. It is a recent Lessepsian migrant into the eastern Mediterranean Sea, which it reached through the Suez Canal, and it is spreading towards the western Mediterranean. It has been caught off the coasts of Israel, the south of Turkey, in Cyprus, the south coasts of mainland Greece, Crete, and Rhodes. In 2013 it was reported off the waters off Lampedusa Island in the central Mediterranean, and in 2015 off Malta and also in waters near the town of Bečići, Montenegro, on the southeastern Adriatic Sea. One specimen was caught in Gruissan in the summer of 2014. Greek authorities sent out an alert about the fish.
In its native range the silver-cheeked toadfish lives on rocky bottoms from shallow coastal waters down to a.
In December 2018, "A Semana", a Cape Verde Island paper published that this fish was caught in its waters. Thus, an alert went out to all fisherman and the general population on the fatal dangers of consuming this fish .

Description

The silver-cheeked toadfish is very similar to the oceanic pufferfish but more elongated and with a symmetrical caudal fin. Its back is grey or brown with darker spots and it has a white belly. A characteristic silver band runs along the sides of the fish. The silver-cheeked toadfish can measure up to.

Feeding

The silver-cheeked toadfish preys upon benthic invertebrates.

Reproduction

Eggs and larvae are found in the pelagic zone.

Danger to humans

Similar to other puffer fishes, the silver-cheeked toadfish is extremely poisonous if eaten because it contains tetrodotoxin in its ovaries and to a lesser extent its skin, muscles and liver, which protects it from voracious predators. It becomes toxic as it eats bacteria that contain the toxin. This deadly substance causes paralysis of involuntary muscles, which may cause its victims to stop breathing or induce heart failure. Fatal intoxications have been reported in Egypt and Israel.