Everything about Seahorse totally explained
Seahorses are a
genus (
Hippocampus) of fish belonging to the family
Syngnathidae, which also includes
pipefish and
leafy sea dragons. There are over 32 species of seahorse, mainly found in
tropical and
subtropical coastal and reef waters all over
Pacific,
Atlantic and
Indian oceans. Colonies have also been found in European waters such as the
Thames Estuary. From
North America down to
South America there are approximately four species, ranging from very small in size (dwarf seahorses are only about an inch long) to those much larger, found off the Pacific Coast of Central America (the foot-long
Hippocampus ingens).
Hippocampus erectus are bigger and fatter seahorses found anywhere from
Nova Scotia down to around
Uruguay. These fish form territories, with males staying in about one square meter of their habitat while females range about one hundred times that area. They bob around in sea grass meadows, mangrove stands, and coral reefs where they're camouflaged by murky brown and grey patterns that blend into the sea grass backgrounds. During social moments or in unusual surroundings, seahorses turn bright colors. According to co-founder of Project Seahorse, Amanda J. Vincent, mates can blush a shade of creamy yellow when meeting each other in the morning. She even encountered one male who took the shade of the orange tape she used to mark the grid in the study area.
Physical description
Seahorses and pipefishes are notable for being the only
species in which males become "
pregnant".
Courtship
When two parties discover a mutual interest at the beginning of breeding season, they court for several days, even while others try to interfere. During this time they've been known to change color, swim side by side holding tails or grip the same strand of sea grass with their tails and wheel around in unison in what is known as their “pre-dawn dance”. They eventually engage in their “true courtship dance” lasting about 8 hours, during which the male pumps water through the egg pouch on his trunk which expands and cleaves open to display an appealing emptiness. When the female’s eggs reach maturity, she and her mate let go of any anchors and snout-to-snout, drift upward out of the seagrass, often spiraling as they rise. "The female inserts her
ovipositor into the male’s brood pouch, where she deposits her eggs, which the male fertilizes. The fertilized eggs then embed in the pouch wall and become enveloped with tissues." New research indicates the male releases sperm into the surrounding sea water during fertilization, and not directly into the pouch as was previously thought. Most seahorse species' pregnancies lasts approximately two to three weeks.
As the female squirts anywhere from dozens to thousands of eggs from a chamber in her trunk into his pouch, her body slims while his swells. Both seahorses then sink back to the bottom and she swims off. Scientists believe the
courtship behavior serves to synchronize the movements of the two animals so that the male can receive the eggs when the female is ready to deposit them. The eggs are then fertilized in the father’s pouch which is coursed with
prolactin, the same hormone responsible for milk production in pregnant women. He doesn’t supply milk, but his pouch provides oxygen as well as a controlled environment incubator. The eggs then hatch in the pouch where the salinity of the water is regulated. This prepares the babies for life in the sea.
Throughout the male’s pregnancy, his mate visits him daily for “morning greetings”. The female seahorse swims over for about 6 minutes of interaction reminiscent of courtship. “They change color, wheel around sea grass fronds, and finally promenade, holding each other’s tails. Then, the female swims away until the next morning, and the male goes back to vacuuming up food through his snout.”
In some recent studies, it has been noted that male seahorses frequently seem to take unusual interest in each other, particularly in the months leading up to the breeding season. They have been observed engaging in rituals in which they pair up and appear to orally stimulate the egg pouches of their partners. It has been speculated that this might serve to clean the pouches in preparation for breeding, as well as to provide sexual pleasure. Homosexual behavior has been observed in some 1500 other species throughout the animal kingdom, so to researchers these findings come as no great surprise.
Birth
The male seahorse can give birth to as many as 2,000 babies at a time and pregnancies last anywhere from 40 to 50 days, depending on the species. When the babies are ready to be born, the male undergoes muscular contractions to expel the “fry” from his pouch. He typically gives birth at night and is ready for the next batch of eggs by morning when his mate returns. Like almost all other fish species, seahorses don't care for their young once they're born. Infants are susceptible to death from predators or being swept into ocean currents, where they drift away from rich feeding grounds or into temperatures too extreme for their delicate bodies. Fewer than five infants of every 1,000 born survive to adulthood, helping to explain why litters are so large. The survival rates of these infants are actually fairly high compared to fish standards, because they're initially sheltered in their father’s pouch during the earliest stages of development, while the eggs of most other fish are abandoned immediately after fertilization. This makes the process worth the great cost to the father of incubating his offspring.
Costs
This entire process costs the male a great amount of energy. This brings into question why the sexual role reversal even takes place. In an environment where one partner incurs more energy costs than the other, you'd expect the lesser of the two to be the aggressor. Within the seahorse species, males are shown to be the more aggressive sex and sometimes “fight” for female attention. According to Amanda Vincent of Project Seahorse, only males tail-wrestled and even snap their heads toward each other. This discovery prompted further study in finding out whether males actually are incurring more costs than their female counterparts. To estimate the female’s direct contribution, researcher Heather D. Masonjones of Amherst College performed a chemical analysis of the energy stored in each egg. Furthermore, to measure the toll that pregnancy takes on a male, Masonjones built a tiny respirator that records oxygen concentrations in water flowing into and out of a chamber. Before a male became pregnant, she checked his baseline need for oxygen. Then, she monitored the increase as pregnancy progressed. The male’s body had to work hard by the end of the pregnancy, consuming almost a third again as much oxygen as he did before mating. To correct for oxygen used by the growing brood, Masonjones managed to keep ¼ inch-high preemie seahorses alive outside the pouch so she could measure their oxygen needs. Although they undergo weeks of pregnancy, males directly contribute only half as much energy for offspring as females do. Therefore, they do in fact fit into the widespread pattern of the less-invested sex being the less-choosy.
Adaptations
The question of why it's the males who undergo pregnancy rather than the females is actually not entirely known, though some researchers believe male pregnancy allows for shorter birthing intervals, hence more offspring. When looking at which sex has the ability to produce more young if they'd an unlimited number of ready and willing partners, males have the potential to produce 17 percent more in a breeding season. Also, females have “time-outs” from the reproductive cycle that are 1.2 times longer than those of males. This doesn't seem to be based on physiology, rather mate choice. When the female’s eggs are ready, she must lay them in a few hours or else she's to eject them onto the sea floor which is a huge cost to her physically, as her eggs amount to about a third of her body weight. To protect against unwillingly losing a clutch, the female demands a long courtship period. Furthermore, the daily greetings help to cement the bond between the pair. Another study conducted by Amanda Vincent of Project Seahorse shows the importance of this daily ritual. She kept a female in a tank with two males and when the female filled one male’s pouch with eggs he was then taken away, while she was left with the other male (the one not impregnated). During the weeks of her mate’s pregnancy, the female and her tankmate greeted each other daily, clinging to the same bit of grass and changing color, but according to Vincent didn't display signs of serious courtship. When the original mate had given birth he was returned to the tank. The female then had a choice between him and the other tankmate. While both males expressed enthusiasm for her attention, even tail wrestling and whacking each other, in all six tests the female rejected her original mate and presented the next clutch of eggs to the tankmate that she'd greeted each day. The importance of the daily meeting is extremely high in maintaining their
monogamous relationship. Although
monogamy within species isn't common, it does appear to exist for some. In this case, the
mate-guarding hypothesis may be an explanation. This hypothesis states that “males remain with a single female because of ecological factors that make male parental care and protection of offspring especially advantageous.” Because the rates of survival for newborn seahorses are so low, incubation is essential at the beginning stages of life. Though not proven, males could have taken on this role because of the time period in which it takes females to produce their eggs. If the males carry the offspring while the females gather the nutrients needed to produce new eggs (which is again, 1/3 of their body weight), then they can continually reproduce batch after batch together, depending on one another for efficiency in spreading both of their genes.
Pets
While many
aquarium hobbyists will keep seahorses as pets, seahorses collected from the wild tend to fare poorly in a home aquarium. They will eat only live foods such as
brine shrimp and are prone to stress in an aquarium, which lowers the efficiency of their immune systems and makes them susceptible to disease.
In recent years, however,
captive breeding of seahorses has become increasingly widespread. These seahorses survive better in captivity, and they're less likely to carry diseases. These seahorses will eat
mysis shrimp, and they don't experience the shock and stress of being taken out of the wild and placed in a small aquarium. Although captive-bred seahorses are more expensive, they survive better than wild seahorses, and take no toll on wild populations.
Seahorses should be kept in an aquarium to themselves, or with compatible tank-mates. Seahorses are slow feeders, and in an aquarium with fast, aggressive feeders, the seahorses will be edged out in the competition for food. Special care should be given to ensure that all individuals obtain enough food at feeding times.
Seahorses can co-exist with many species of
shrimp and other
bottom-feeding creatures. Fish from the
goby family also make good tank-mates. Some species are especially dangerous to the slow-moving seahorses and should be avoided completely:
eels,
tangs,
triggerfish,
squid,
octopus, and
sea anemones.
Animals sold as "
freshwater seahorses" are usually the closely related
pipefish, of which a few species live in the lower reaches of rivers. The supposed true "freshwater seahorse" called
Hippocampus aimei wasn't a real species, but a name sometimes used for individuals of
Barbour's seahorse and
Hedgehog seahorse. The latter is a species commonly found in
brackish waters, but not actually a freshwater fish.
Use in Chinese medicine
Seahorse populations have been
endangered in recent years by overfishing. Therefore, seahorse fishing is strictly illegal. The seahorse is used in traditional
Chinese herbology, and as many as 20 million seahorses may be caught each year and sold for this purpose. Medicinal seahorses are not readily bred in captivity as they're susceptible to disease and have somewhat different energetics than aquarium seahorses.
Import and export of seahorses has been controlled under
CITES since
May 15,
2004.
The problem may be exacerbated by the growth of pills and capsules as the preferred method of ingesting medication as they're cheaper and more available than traditional, individually tailored prescriptions of raw medicinals but the contents are harder to track. Seahorses once had to be of a certain size and quality before they were accepted by
TCM practitioners and consumers. But declining availability of the preferred large, pale and smooth seahorses has been offset by the shift towards prepackaged medicines, which make it possible for TCM merchants to sell previously unused juvenile, spiny and dark-coloured animals. Today almost a third of the seahorses sold in China are prepackaged. This adds to the pressure on the species.
Philippine luminous seahorse sanctuary
Getafe, Jandayan Island off
Bohol is a marine sanctuary, since 1995 to the luminous seahorses swimming among corals in the dark waters. On
December 9, 2007, the sanctuary was awarded the most outstanding marine protected area (MPA) in the
Philippines by the MPA Support Network (MSN), a multisectoral alliance of organizations seeking to protect the marine environment. The 50-hectare Handumon marine sanctuary is part of a large barrier reef in the waters of Bohol, teeming with fish, seashells and thick
mangroves. The
Haribon Foundation set up a Project Seahorse Foundation in Handumon to protect seahorses.
Species
- Genus Hippocampus
- Big-belly seahorse, Hippocampus abdominalis Lesson, 1827 (New Zealand and south and east Australia)
- Winged seahorse, Hippocampus alatus Kuiter, 2001
- West African seahorse, Hippocampus algiricus Kaup, 1856
- Narrow-bellied seahorse, Hippocampus angustus Günther, 1870
- Barbour's seahorse, Hippocampus barbouri Jordan & Richardson, 1908
- Pygmy seahorse, Hippocampus bargibanti Whitley, 1970 (West Pacific area (Indonesia, Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, etc)
- False-eyed seahorse, Hippocampus biocellatus Kuiter, 2001
- Réunion seahorse, Hippocampus borboniensis Duméril, 1870
- Short-head seahorse or knobby seahorse, Hippocampus breviceps Peters, 1869 (south and east Australia)
- Giraffe seahorse, Hippocampus camelopardalis Bianconi, 1854
- Knysna seahorse, Hippocampus capensis Boulenger, 1900
- Hippocampus colemani Kuiter, 2003
- Tiger tail seahorse, Hippocampus comes Cantor, 1850
- Crowned seahorse, Hippocampus coronatus Temminck & Schlegel, 1850
- Denise's pygmy seahorse, Hippocampus denise Lourie & Randall, 2003
- Lined seahorse, Hippocampus erectus Perry, 1810 (east coast of the Americas, between Nova Scotia and Uruguay)
- Fisher's seahorse, Hippocampus fisheri Jordan & Evermann, 1903
- Sea pony, Hippocampus fuscus Rüppell, 1838 (Indian Ocean)
- Big-head seahorse, Hippocampus grandiceps Kuiter, 2001
- Long-snouted seahorse, Hippocampus guttulatus Cuvier, 1829
- Eastern spiny seahorse, Hippocampus hendriki Kuiter, 2001
- Short-snouted seahorse, Hippocampus hippocampus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean)
- Thorny seahorse, Hippocampus histrix Kaup, 1856 (Indian Ocean, Persian Gulf, Red Sea, and the Far East)
- Pacific seahorse, Hippocampus ingens Girard, 1858 (Pacific coast of North, Central and South America)
- Jayakar's seahorse, Hippocampus jayakari Boulenger, 1900
- Collared seahorse, Hippocampus jugumus Kuiter, 2001
- Great seahorse, Hippocampus kelloggi Jordan & Snyder, 1901
- Spotted seahorse, Hippocampus kuda Bleeker, 1852
- Lichtenstein's seahorse, Hippocampus lichtensteinii Kaup, 1856
- Bullneck seahorse, Hippocampus minotaur Gomon, 1997
- Japanese seahorse, Hippocampus mohnikei Bleeker, 1854
- Monte Bello seahorse, Hippocampus montebelloensis Kuiter, 2001
- Northern spiny seahorse, Hippocampus multispinus Kuiter, 2001
- High-crown seahorse, Hippocampus procerus Kuiter, 2001
- Queensland seahorse, Hippocampus queenslandicus Horne, 2001
- Longsnout seahorse, Hippocampus reidi Ginsburg, 1933 (Caribbean coral reefs)
- Half-spined seahorse, Hippocampus semispinosus Kuiter, 2001
- Dhiho's seahorse, Hippocampus sindonis Jordan & Snyder, 1901
- Hedgehog seahorse, Hippocampus spinosissimus Weber, 1913
- West Australian seahorse, Hippocampus subelongatus Castelnau, 1873
- Longnose seahorse, Hippocampus trimaculatus Leach, 1814
- White's seahorse, Hippocampus whitei Bleeker, 1855 (east Australia)
- Zebra seahorse, Hippocampus zebra Whitley, 1964
- Dwarf seahorse, Hippocampus zosterae Jordan & Gilbert, 1882 (Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean)
Cultural references
In
heraldry, a seahorse is depicted as a creature with the foreparts of a horse and the hindparts of a fish. See, for example, the right supporter of the
Isle of Wight Arms, the supporters on either side of the crest of the city of
Newcastle upon Tyne, or the coincidental arms of the
University of Newcastle,
Australia.
The seahorse is prominent in the logo of
Waterford Crystal and the logotype of illustrator
W. W. Denslow.
In the
Seri culture of northwestern
Mexico, the legend is that the seahorse is a person who, to escape his pursuers, fled into the sea, placing his sandals in his waistbelt at his back.
The
National Society for Epilepsy has a seahorse for its mascot named Cesar (after the Roman emperor,
Julius Caesar, who was believed to have had
epilepsy). The seahorse mascot was chosen because the
hippocampus, a part of the
brain that's resistant to damage from epileptic seizures, resembles a seahorse in shape.
In the Hawaiian culture the seahorse has long be a sign of eternal friendship.
Gallery
Image:Seahorse, Turneffe Islands, Belize.jpg|Seahorse, Turneffe Island, Belize
Image:Seahorse, St. Croix, Virgin Islands.jpg|Seahorse, St. Croix, Virgin Islands
Image:PotbellySeahorse_TNAquarium.jpg|Potbelly seahorse pair link tails at the Tennessee Aquarium.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Seahorse'.
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