Seahorse is the title given to 54 species of marine fish in the
genus Hippocampus. "Hippocampus" comes from the Ancient
Greek hippos meaning "horse" and kampos meaning
"sea monster".
Location
Seahorses are mainly found in
shallow tropical and temperate waters throughout the world, and prefer to live
in sheltered areas such as seagrass beds, estuaries, coral reefs, or mangroves.
In Pacific waters from North America to South America there are approximately
four species. In the Atlantic, the H. erectus ranges from Nova Scotia to
Uruguay. H. zosterae, known as the dwarf seahorse, is found in the
Bahamas.
Colonies have been found in European
waters such as the Thames Estuary.
Three species live in the
Mediterranean Sea: H. guttulatus (the long-snouted seahorse), H.
hippocampus (the short-snouted seahorse) and H. fuscus (the sea
pony). These species form territories; males stay within 1 square meter
(11 sq ft) of their habitat while females range about one hundred
times that.
Physical
description
Spiny seahorse H. histrix
from East Timor holding on to soft coral with its prehensile tail
Seahorses range in size from 0.6 to
14 in (1.5 to 35.5 cm). They are named for their equine appearance. Although
they are bony fish, they do not have scales but rather thin skin stretched over
a series of bony plates, which are arranged in rings throughout their body.
Each species has a distinct number of rings. Seahorses swim upright, another
characteristic that is not shared by their close pipefish relatives, who swim
horizontally. Razorfish are the only other fish that swim vertically like a
seahorse. Unusual among fish, seahorses have a flexible, well-defined neck.
They also sport a coronet on the head, which is distinct for each individual.
According to Guinness World
Records 2009, H. zosterae (the dwarf seahorse) is the slowest moving
fish, with a top speed of about 5 feet (150 cm) per hour. They swim very
poorly, rapidly fluttering a dorsal fin and using pectoral fins (located behind
their eyes) to steer. Seahorses have no caudal fin. Since they are poor
swimmers, they are most likely to be found resting with their prehensile tails
wound around a stationary object. They have long snouts, which they use to suck
up food, and eyes that can move independently of each other (like a chameleon).
Evolution
and fossil record
Anatomical evidence, supported by molecular,
physical, and genetic evidence, demonstrates that seahorses are highly modified
pipefish. The fossil record of seahorses, however, is very sparse. The best
known and best studied fossils are specimens of H. guttulatus (though
literature more commonly refers to them under the synonym of H. ramulosus),
from the Marecchia River Formation of Rimini Province, Italy, dating back to
the Lower Pliocene, about 3 million years ago. The earliest known seahorse
fossils are of two pipefish-like species, H. sarmaticus and H.
slovenicus from the coprolitic horizon of Tunjice Hills, a middle Miocene
lagerstätte in Slovenia dating back about 13 million years. Molecular dating
finds that pipefish and seahorses separated during the Late Oligocene. This has
led to speculation that seahorses evolved in response to large areas of
shallow-water, newly created as the result of tectonic events. The shallow
water allowed the expansion of seagrass habitats that selected for the
camouflage offered by the seahorses’ upright posture. These tectonic changes
occurred in the Western Pacific Ocean suggesting an origin there with molecular
data suggesting two later and separate invasions of the Atlantic Ocean.
Reproduction
The male seahorse is equipped with a
brood pouch on the ventral, or front-facing, side of the tail. When mating, the
female seahorse deposits up to 1,500 eggs in the male's pouch. The male carries
the eggs for 9 to 45 days until the seahorses emerge fully developed, but very
small. Once the seahorses are released into the water, the male's role is done
and he offers no further care and often mates again within hours or days during
the breeding season.
Courtship
Before breeding, seahorses may court
for several days. Scientists believe the courtship behavior synchronizes the
animals' movements as well as reproductive state so that the male can receive
the eggs when the female is ready to deposit them. During this time they may
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 a
“pre-dawn dance". They eventually engage in a “true courtship dance"
lasting about 8 hours, during which the male pumps water through the egg pouch
on his trunk which expands and opens to display its 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 and deposits
dozens to thousands of eggs. As the female releases her eggs, her body slims
while his swells. Both animals then sink back into the seagrass and she swims
away.
Gestation
Pregnant seahorse at the New York
Aquarium
The male releases his sperm directly
into seawater where it fertilizes the eggs, which are then embedded in the
pouch wall and become surrounded by a spongy tissue. The male supplies the eggs
with prolactin, the same hormone responsible for milk production in pregnant
mammals. The 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 newborns for life in the sea. Throughout
gestation, which in most species requires two to four weeks, his mate visits
him daily for “morning greetings”. They interact for about 6 minutes,
reminiscent of courtship. The female then swims away until the next morning,
and the male returns to sucking up food through his snout.
Research published in 2007 indicates
the male releases sperm into the surrounding sea water during fertilization,
and not directly into the pouch as previously thought.
Birth
The number of young released by the
male seahorse averages 100–1000 for most species, but may be as low as 5 for
the smaller species, or as high as 2,500--. When the fry are ready to be born,
the male expels them with muscular contractions. 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 do not nurture their young after
birth. Infants are susceptible to predators or ocean currents which wash them
away from feeding grounds or into temperatures too extreme for their delicate
bodies. Less than 0.5% of infants survive to adulthood, explaining why litters
are so large. These survival rates are actually fairly high compared to other
fish, because of their protected gestation, making the process worth the great
cost to the father. The eggs of most other fish are abandoned immediately after
fertilization.
Questions
surrounding reproductive roles
Reproduction is energetically costly
to the male. 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, Bateman's principle suggests that the lesser contributor takes the role
of the aggressor. Male seahorses are more aggressive and sometimes “fight” for
female attention. According to Amanda Vincent of Project Seahorse, only males
tail-wrestle and snap their heads at each other. This discovery prompted
further study of energy costs. To estimate the female’s direct contribution,
researcher Heather D. Masonjones, associate professor of biology at the University
of Tampa, chemically analyzed the energy stored in each egg. To measure the
burden on the male, Masonjones measured its oxygen consumption. By the end of
incubation, the male consumed almost 33% more oxygen than before mating. The
study concluded that the female's energy expenditure while generating eggs is
twice that of males during incubation confirming the standard hypothesis.
Why the male seahorse (and other
members of Syngnathidae) carries the offspring through gestation is unknown,
though some researchers believe it allows for shorter birthing intervals, in
turn resulting in more offspring. Given an unlimited number of ready and
willing partners, males have the potential to produce 17 percent more offspring
than females in a breeding season. Also, females have “time-outs” from the
reproductive cycle that are 1.2 times longer than those of males. This seems to
be based on mate choice, rather than physiology. When the female’s eggs are
ready, she must lay them in a few hours or eject them into the water column.
Making eggs is a huge cost to her physically, since they amount to about a
third of her body weight. To protect against losing a clutch, the female
demands a long courtship. The daily greetings help to cement the bond between
the pair.
Monogamy
One common misconception about
seahorses is that they mate for life. Many species of seahorses form pair bonds
that last through at least the breeding season. Some species show a higher
level of mate fidelity than others. However, many species readily switch mates
when the opportunity arises. H. abdominalis and H. breviceps have
been shown to breed in groups, showing no continuous mate preference. Many more
species mating habits have not been studied, so it is unknown how many species
are actually monogamous, or how long those bonds actually last.
Although monogamy within fish is not
common, it does appear to exist for some. In this case, the mate guarding
hypothesis may be an explanation. This hypothesis states “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. Though not proven,
males could have taken on this role because of the lengthy period the females
require to produce their eggs. If males incubate while females prepare the next
clutch (amounting to 1/3 of body weight), they can reduce the interval between
clutches.
Feeding
habits
Seahorses feed on small crustaceans
floating in the water or crawling on the bottom. With excellent camouflage and
a lot of patience, seahorses ambush prey that float within striking range.
Mysid shrimp and other small crustaceans are favorites, but some seahorses have
been observed eating other kinds of invertebrates and even larval fish. While
feeding they produce a distinctive click each time a food item is ingested. The
same clicks are heard with social interactions.
Threats
of extinction
Seahorse and scorpion skewers as
street food in China
Many seahorse species are data
deficient, and there is insufficient information to make an assessment about
their risk of extinction. Because the seahorse population is unknown, there is
a risk of losing more seahorses because of the lack of information about how
many are dying each year, how many are being born, the number used for
souvenirs, etc. Coral reefs and seagrass beds are deteriorating, reducing
viable habitats for seahorses.
Aquaria
While many aquarium hobbyists keep
seahorses as pets, seahorses collected from the wild tend to fare poorly in
home aquaria. Many eat only live foods such as brine shrimp and are prone to
stress, which damages their immune systems and makes them susceptible to
disease.
Seahorses (Hippocampus erectus)
at the New England Aquarium, USA.
In recent years, however, captive
breeding has become more popular. Such seahorses survive better in captivity,
and are less likely to carry diseases. They eat frozen mysidacea (crustaceans)
that are readily available from aquarium stores, and do not experience the
stress of moving out of the wild. Although captive-bred seahorses are more
expensive, they take no toll on wild populations.
Seahorses should be kept in an
aquarium to themselves, or with compatible tank-mates. Seahorses are slow
feeders, so fast, aggressive feeders will leave them without food.
Seahorses can co-exist with many
species of shrimp and other bottom-feeding creatures. Gobies also make good
tank-mates. Keepers are generally advised to avoid 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 H. aimei was not a real species, but a name
sometimes used for Barbour's and Hedgehog seahorses. The latter is a species
that can be found in brackish waters, but not actually a freshwater fish.
Use
in Chinese medicine
Medicinal seahorse
Seahorse populations are thought to
have been endangered in recent years by overfishing and habitat destruction.
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 are susceptible to disease,
and it is believed that they have different medicinal properties from aquarium
seahorses. Seahorses are also used as medicines by the Indonesians, the Central
Filipinos, and many other ethnic groups.
Import and export of seahorses has
been controlled under CITES since May 15, 2004. However, Indonesia, Japan,
Norway, and South Korea have chosen to opt out of the trade rules set by CITES.
The problem may be exacerbated by
the growth of pills and capsules as the preferred method of ingesting
medication. They are 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. 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, adding to the pressure on
the species.
Species
There are currently 54 recognized
species in this genus:
H. kuda, known as the "common seahorse"
H. subelongatus, known as the "West Australian seahorse"
H. whitei, known as "White's seahorse"
- Hippocampus abdominalis Lesson, 1827 (Big-belly seahorse)
- Hippocampus alatus Kuiter, 2001 (Winged seahorse)
- Hippocampus algiricus Kaup, 1856 (West African seahorse)
- Hippocampus angustus Günther, 1870 (Narrow-bellied seahorse)
- Hippocampus barbouri D. S. Jordan & R. E. Richardson, 1908 (Barbour's seahorse)
- Hippocampus bargibanti Whitley, 1970 (Pygmy seahorse)
- Hippocampus biocellatus Kuiter, 2001 (False-eyed seahorse)
- Hippocampus borboniensis A. H. A. Duméril, 1870 (Réunion seahorse)
- Hippocampus breviceps W. K. H. Peters, 1869 (Short-headed seahorse)
- Hippocampus camelopardalis Bianconi, 1854 (Giraffe seahorse)
- Hippocampus capensis Boulenger, 1900 (Knysna seahorse)
- Hippocampus colemani Kuiter, 2003
- Hippocampus comes Cantor, 1850 (Tiger tail seahorse)
- Hippocampus coronatus Temminck & Schlegel, 1850 (Crowned seahorse)
- Hippocampus curvicuspis Fricke, 2004 (New Caledonian thorny seahorse)
- Hippocampus debelius M. F. Gomon & Kuiter, 2009 (Softcoral seahorse)
- Hippocampus denise Lourie & J. E. Randall, 2003 (Denise's pygmy seahorse)
- Hippocampus erectus Perry, 1810 (Lined seahorse)
- Hippocampus fisheri D. S. Jordan & Evermann, 1903 (Fisher's seahorse)
- Hippocampus fuscus Rüppell, 1838 (Sea pony)
- Hippocampus grandiceps Kuiter, 2001 (Big-head seahorse)
- Hippocampus guttulatus G. Cuvier, 1829 (Long-snouted seahorse)
- Hippocampus hendriki Kuiter, 2001 (Eastern spiny seahorse)
- Hippocampus hippocampus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Short-snouted seahorse)
- Hippocampus histrix Kaup, 1856 (Spiny seahorse)
- Hippocampus ingens Girard, 1858 (Pacific seahorse)
- Hippocampus jayakari Boulenger, 1900 (Jayakar's seahorse)
- Hippocampus jugumus Kuiter, 2001 (Collared seahorse)
- Hippocampus kelloggi D. S. Jordan & Snyder, 1901 (Great seahorse)
- Hippocampus kuda Bleeker, 1852 (Spotted seahorse)
- Hippocampus lichtensteinii Kaup, 1856 (Lichtenstein's seahorse)
- Hippocampus minotaur M. F. Gomon, 1997 (Bullneck seahorse)
- Hippocampus mohnikei Bleeker, 1854 (Japanese seahorse)
- Hippocampus montebelloensis Kuiter, 2001 (Monte Bello seahorse)
- Hippocampus multispinus Kuiter, 2001 (Northern spiny seahorse)
- Hippocampus paradoxus Foster & M. F. Gomon, 2010 (Paradoxical seahorse)
- Hippocampus patagonicus Piacentino & Luzzatto, 2004
- Hippocampus pontohi Lourie & Kuiter, 2008
- Hippocampus procerus Kuiter, 2001 (High-crown seahorse)
- Hippocampus pusillus Fricke, 2004 (Pygmy thorny seahorse)
- Hippocampus queenslandicus Horne, 2001 (Queensland seahorse)
- Hippocampus reidi Ginsburg, 1933 (Longsnout seahorse)
- Hippocampus satomiae Lourie & Kuiter, 2008 (Satomi's pygmy seahorse)
- Hippocampus semispinosus Kuiter, 2001 (Half-spined seahorse)
- Hippocampus severnsi Lourie & Kuiter, 2008
- Hippocampus sindonis D. S. Jordan & Snyder, 1901 (Dhiho's seahorse)
- Hippocampus spinosissimus M. C. W. Weber, 1913 (Hedgehog seahorse)
- Hippocampus subelongatus Castelnau, 1873 (West Australian seahorse)
- Hippocampus trimaculatus Leach, 1814 (Longnose seahorse)
- Hippocampus tyro J. E. Randall & Lourie, 2009
- Hippocampus waleananus M. F. Gomon & Kuiter, 2009 (Walea Pygmy seahorse)
- Hippocampus whitei Bleeker, 1855 (White's seahorse)
- Hippocampus zebra Whitley, 1964 (Zebra seahorse)
- Hippocampus zosterae D. S. Jordan & C. H. Gilbert, 1882 (Dwarf seahorse)
Pygmy
seahorses
Hippocampus satomiae (Satomi's pygmy seahorse) attached to coral
Pygmy seahorses are less than 15
millimeters (0.59 in) tall and 17 millimeters (0.67 in) wide members
of the genus. Previously the term was applied exclusively to the species H.
bargibanti but since 1997, discoveries have made this term obsolete. The
species H. minotaur, H. denise, H. colemani, H. pontohi,
H. severnsi and H. satomiae have been described. Other species
that are believed to be unclassified have also been reported in books, dive
magazines and on the Internet. They can be distinguished from other species of
seahorse by their 12 trunk rings, low number of tail rings (26–29), the
location in which young are brooded in the trunk region of males and their
extremely small size. Molecular analysis (of ribosomal RNA) of 32 Hippocampus
species found that H. bargibanti belongs in a separate clade from other
members of the genus and therefore that the species diverged from the other
species in the "ancient" past.
Most pygmy seahorses are well
camouflaged and live in close association with other organisms including
colonial hydrozoans (Lytocarpus and Antennellopsis), coralline
algae (Halimeda) sea fans (Muricella, Annella, Acanthogorgia).
This combined with their small size accounts for why most species have only
been noticed and classified since 2001.
Source :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seahorse
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