Longhorn cowfish

Lactoria cornuta

The longhorn cowfish, ''Lactoria cornuta'', is a variety of boxfish from the family Ostraciidae, recognizable by its long horns that protrude from the front of its head, rather like those of a cow or bull. They are a resident of the Indo-Pacific region and can grow up to 20 inches long. Whilst badly suited to the home aquarium, the cowfish is becoming increasingly popular as a pet.

Adults are reef fish, often solitary and territorial, live around sand or rubble bottom up to a depth of 50 m. They are omnivorous, feeding upon benthic algae, various microorganisms, and foraminiferans that it strains from sediments, sponges, polychaete worms from sand flats, mollusks, small crustaceans, and small fishes, able to feed on benthic invertebrates by blowing jets of water into the sandy substrate.
Longhorn cowfish (lactoria cornuta) Cowfish (part of the boxfish family) defending its coral home. Boxfish,Fish,Lactoria cornuta,Longhorn cowfish,Rhenen Zoo,Underwater,longhorn cowfish,zoo

Habitat

Its primary habitat is coral reefs in lagoons, on reef flats, and on protected seaward reefs. Juveniles associate with Acropora corals. Depth range is 3.3–148 ft .

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassActinopterygii
OrderTetraodontiformes
FamilyOstraciidae
GenusLactoria
SpeciesL. cornuta