Difference between revisions of "Acorn barnacle"

From Nookipedia, the Animal Crossing wiki
(Added catch details, trimming infobox)
m (added other languages in infobox)
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
 
{{Infobox Sea Creature
 
{{Infobox Sea Creature
 
|name= Acorn Barnacle
 
|name= Acorn Barnacle
 +
|ja-name= フジツボ
 +
|ko-name=
 +
|zh-name=
 +
|fr-name= Balane
 +
|it-name= Dente di cane
 +
|es-name=
 +
|de-name=
 +
|nl-name=
 +
|ru-name=
 
|image= Acorn Barnacle NL.png
 
|image= Acorn Barnacle NL.png
 
|imagesize= 100px
 
|imagesize= 100px

Revision as of 01:39, July 1, 2020

"I got an acorn barnacle! Maybe I can grow a barnacle tree?" —New Leaf

Acorn Barnacle
100px
Real-world info
Name: Unknown
Family: '
Main appearances

Other appearances
Names in other languages
 フジツボ
 Unknown
 Dente di cane
 Unknown
 Unknown
 Balane
 Unknown
 Unknown
 Unknown
 Balane
 Unknown
 Unknown

Acorn Barnacles (フジツボ, Fuji tsubo) are a type of sea creature only found in Animal Crossing: New Leaf. This game marks the first appearance of Acorn Barnacles.

Catch details

In New Leaf

#4

Acorn barnacle
"I got an acorn barnacle! Maybe I can grow a barnacle tree?"

Time of year Unknown
Time of day All year: All day
Peak times June - August
Shadow size Tiny
Shadow movement Stationary
Sea creature size 3 cm
Rarity Very common
Selling price  200 Bells
Furniture size 1.0 x 1.0


Donating to the Museum

In New Leaf

Upon donating an Acorn Barnacle to the Museum, it can be found in the large pool in the first room of the Ocean exhibit, along with many other species of sea creatures. It is found on the large rock. The exhibit has this to say about the Acorn Barnacle:

"They attach to hard places, and though they look like bivalves, they are related to shrimp and crab. Some species are even edible and have a very crab-like taste to them, making them a fine delicacy. Young acorn barnacles come from eggs, do not have shells, and float around the ocean like shrimp. They gradually develop their shells as they grow into the image we usually see."

Names in other languages

European French Balane -

Italian Dente di cane Balano