Indian Dwarf Pea Puffer
Indian Dwarf Pea Puffer
Indian Dwarf Pea Puffer (Carinotetraodon travancoricus) is one of the most popular and sought-after nano fish in the freshwater hobby — a fully freshwater puffer barely reaching one inch, with an enormous personality packed into the smallest puffer body available. Males develop a vivid pattern of dark spots on a yellow-green body with a distinctive dark 'racing stripe' on the belly and iridescent blue-green eye coloration. Every Pea Puffer has a distinct individual personality — curious, bold, and immediately aware of their keeper.
Feeding & Care Tip: Hikari Frozen or Freeze-Dried Bloodworms is the ideal primary staple — nano puffers are enthusiastic bloodworm hunters. Feed 2–3 times daily in small amounts. For dental health, provide live or frozen small snails (bladder snails, ramshorn snails) and small shrimp with shells several times per week. Snail availability is essential — see the snail colony tip below.
Native to the rivers of Kerala and Karnataka in the Western Ghats of India — the same biodiversity hotspot that produces the Roseline Shark and many other extraordinary aquarium fish. C. travancoricus is listed as IUCN Vulnerable due to habitat loss and collection pressure. Endemic to the Pamba, Chalakudy, and related rivers of Kerala. All aquarium stock is captive-bred, which is both the legal and ethical choice.
All puffer fish have fused, beak-like teeth that grow continuously throughout their lives. Hard foods — snails, shellfish, and crustaceans with intact shells — are essential for wearing down the teeth. A puffer fed only soft foods will eventually develop overgrown teeth that prevent eating, a condition requiring veterinary intervention. Snails and hard-shelled foods are dental care, not just food. The Pea Puffer is a dedicated snail hunter — it will methodically seek out and consume every snail in an aquarium. A dedicated snail colony is strongly recommended as the primary food source. Despite their tiny size, Pea Puffers can be aggressive toward tankmates — they may nip fins and harass peaceful fish. Best in a species-specific setup or with fast, robust tankmates like small danios.
Keep in groups of 3 or more with more females than males — males can be territorial with each other. A heavily planted aquarium provides territory boundaries and enrichment. The Pea Puffer is one of the most rewarding nano fish for keepers who appreciate personality over schooling behavior.
Care & Ideal Parameters
| Difficulty | Easy — Moderate |
| Temperament | Can be aggressive — species or careful community only |
| Typical Adult Size | 1.0 inch (2.5 cm) |
| Min. Group Size | 3 minimum — more females than males |
| Ideal Temp | 74–82°F (23–28°C) |
| Ideal pH | 6.5–7.5 |
| Ideal GH | 5–15 dGH |
| Ideal KH | 2–8 dKH |
| Staple Food | Hikari Frozen or Freeze-Dried Bloodworms |
| Treat / Supplement | Live/frozen snails; small shrimp with shells (dental essential) |
| Origin | Kerala and Karnataka rivers, Western Ghats, India (IUCN Vulnerable) |
| Notes | IUCN Vulnerable — endemic to Western Ghats rivers of Kerala/Karnataka. All stock captive-bred. Snail hunter — dedicated snail colony essential. Individual personality — one of most charismatic nano fish available. Males have dark belly stripe and iridescent eyes. |