Pygmy seahorse explained

The pygmy seahorses comprise several species of tiny seahorse in the syngnathid family or Syngnathidae (seahorses and pipefish). Family Syngnathidae is part of order Syngnathiformes, which contains fishes with fused jaws that suck food into tubular mouths. They are found in Southeast Asia in the Coral Triangle area. They are some of the smallest seahorse species in the world, typically measuring less than 2cm (01inches) in height.[1] [2]

The first pygmy seahorse known to science was Hippocampus bargibanti. At least six more species were named after 2000. The first species discovered lives exclusively on fan corals and matches their colour and appearance. So effective is pygmy seahorse camouflage that it was discovered only when a host gorgonian was being examined in a laboratory. In 1969 a New Caledonian scientist, Georges Bargibant, was collecting specimens of Muricella spp gorgonians for the Nouméa museum and whilst one of these was on his dissection table he happened to notice a pair of tiny seahorses. The next year they were officially named by Whitley as Bargibant's pygmy seahorse.[3] Other species live on soft corals or are free-ranging among seagrasses and algae.[4]

Description

The pygmy seahorse is both tiny and well camouflaged. It is very difficult to spot amongst the sea grasses, soft corals, or gorgonians (sea fans) that it inhabits. Other distinctive pygmy seahorse characteristics include a fleshy head and body, a very short snout, and a long, prehensile tail. With their short snouts, they have the appearance of baby animals. Pygmy seahorses are 14mm27mm long from the tip of the tail to the end of the snout, so that their vertical height while swimming is still smaller.[5] An adult may be as small as 13mm long.[6]

True pygmy seahorses have distinctive morphological markers. Unlike other seahorses, they have a single gill opening on the back of the head, instead of two on the sides.

Males and females are distinguished by openings at the bottom of the trunk: females have a tiny, raised round pore for extruding eggs and males have a fore-and-aft slit for accepting them.

Similarly to the rest of seahorses, males brood their young in a pouch on their trunk.

Species

The known species are these:

Other dwarf species

Other small seahorses are sometimes called pygmy seahorses, but lack the single gill opening and trunk brooding that distinguish the true pygmy seahorse. They can be called dwarf seahorses:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Lourie, S.A., Foster, S.J., Cooper, E.W.T. and Vincent, A.C.J. (2004) A Guide to the Identification of Seahorses. Project Seahorse and TRAFFIC North America, Washington D.C.
  2. http://www.fishbase.org/summary/Hippocampus-bargibanti.html Bargibant's seahorse
  3. Smith, Richard E. Hippocampus bargibanti
  4. Reijnen, B.T., van der Meij, S.E.T., van Ofwegen, L.P. (2011) "Fish, fans and hydroids: host species of pygmy seahorses." ZooKeys 103: 1-26.
  5. Smith, Richard E. Pygmy seahorse research
  6. http://foa.webboy.net/species/Hippocampus/bargibanti Fishes of Australia: H. bargibanti
  7. Web site: Smith . Richard E. . Hippocampus bargibanti . Ocean Realm Images . 31 October 2012 . dead . 13 April 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160413015229/http://www.oceanrealmimages.com/gallery/pygmy-seahorses/species/hippocampus-bargibanti.
  8. http://pygmyseahorses.com/common-pygmy-seahorse-h-bargibanti Common Pygmy Seahorse
  9. Web site: Smith . Richard E. . Hippocampus denise . Ocean Realm Images . 31 October 2012 . dead . 27 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160327180814/http://oceanrealmimages.com/gallery/pygmy-seahorses/species/hippocampus-denise.
  10. http://pygmyseahorses.com/denise%E2%80%99s-seahorse-h-denise Denise's Pygmy Seahorse
  11. Web site: Smith . Richard E. . Hippocampus pontohi . Ocean Realm Images . 31 October 2012 . dead . 27 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160327162913/http://oceanrealmimages.com/gallery/pygmy-seahorses/species/hippocampus-pontohi .
  12. http://pygmyseahorses.com/pontohs-seahorse-h-pontohi Weedy Pygmy Seahorse
  13. Web site: Smith . Richard E. . Hippocampus satomiae . Ocean Realm Images . 31 October 2012 . dead . 27 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160327182047/http://oceanrealmimages.com/gallery/pygmy-seahorses/species/hippocampus-satomiae .
  14. http://pygmyseahorses.com/satomis-pygmy-seahorse-hippocampus-satomiae Satomi's Pygmy Seahorse
  15. Web site: Smith . Richard E. . Hippocampus severnsi . Ocean Realm Images . 31 October 2012 . dead . 27 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160327162858/http://oceanrealmimages.com/gallery/pygmy-seahorses/species/hippocampus-severnsi .
  16. Web site: Smith . Richard E. . Hippocampus waleananus . Ocean Realm Images . 31 October 2012 . dead . 3 July 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170703223047/http://oceanrealmimages.com/gallery/pygmy-seahorses/species/hippocampus-waleananus.
  17. http://pygmyseahorses.com/colemans-pygmy-seahorse-h-colemani Coleman's Pygmy Seahorse
  18. Hippocampus japapigu, a new species of pygmy seahorse from Japan, with a redescription of H. Pontohi (Teleostei, Syngnathidae). 10.3897/zookeys.779.24799. 30166895. 6110155. ZooKeys. 779. 27–49. 2018. Short. Graham. Smith. Richard. Motomura. Hiroyuki. Harasti. David. Hamilton. Healy. free. 2018ZooK..779...27S .
  19. Web site: New Species of Pygmy Seahorse Discovered: Hippocampus japapigu Biology Sci-News.com. 2020-10-17. Breaking Science News Sci-News.com. en-US.
  20. Web site: Meet Africa's first pygmy seahorse species . University of Leeds . 2020-05-20 . Phys.org . 2020-05-22.
  21. News: Corlett . Eva . Pygmy pipehorse discovered in New Zealand given Māori name in 'world first' . 6 October 2021 . The Guardian . London, United Kingdom . 0261-3077 . 2021-10-06.