Photo StoryPublished : Mar 07, 2022Updated : Nov 15, 2022
Having evolved 25 million years ago, seahorses are unparalleled in their body structure, behaviour and ecology
Text by: Mahima Jaini
Having evolved 25 million years ago, seahorses are unparalleled in their body structure, behaviour and ecology
Seahorses are by far the most bizarre fish found on our planet— not only in appearance and behaviour but also with regard to the value humans have placed on them. Seahorses and pipefishes belong to the family Syngnathidae — slender fish with elongated snouts, small mouths, and bodies encased in bony plates. Seahorses are the only fish that swim in an upright position, having diverged from the pipefish body plan 25 million years ago.
Seahorses belong to the subfamily Hippocampinae which means “horse caterpillar”. They look very horse-like thanks to their erect posture, long necks, and downturned heads. Although they are fish, these organisms bear little resemblance to the textbook fish body shape. Seahorses lack a tail fin; most of their forward movement happens with the movement of their dorsal fin (the one on their backs). The pectoral fins (on their sides) help them turn, and their prehensile tail allows them to hold onto structures. Seahorses love wrapping their fin-less tails around plants, corals, rocks etc., standing erect with a patient, worldly demeanour.
Seahorses and some pipefish are unique. Males live-brood their juveniles. Females deposit the eggs into the male’s brood pouch, where fertilisation happens. Amazingly, there is a placental connection between the father’s body and the developing eggs, supplying the little embryos with much-needed oxygen and nutrients. The placental connection, however, is not an umbilical cord to every developing embryo — that would be a cumbersome feat as species often produce over 500 eggs. Instead, the father is connected to his developing offspring through a thin brood pouch and numerous blood vessels. Seahorses have direct development, i.e. there is no intermediate larval stage, and juveniles hatch looking much like the adult.
The seahorse’s beauty and unique appearance often lands them in the aquariums and the curio trade. Moreover, the Chinese use dry ground-up seahorses to treat a range of ailments from sore throats to sexual dysfunction. This is rather unfortunate, especially because highly effective plant-based and chemically-derived cures exist for all these problems. Turning to rare wildlife for the same disregards them as living beings that deserve to thrive on the planet, much like us.
is a marine biologist, broadly interested in reproductive ecology, marine larvae and population connectivity, forever fascinated by marine invertebrates