Interesting Seahorse
Facts:
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Seahorses
vary in size from 0.6 to 14 inches in length.
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Seahorses
have equine (horse-like) shape of the head, elongated body and curled tail.
They do not have scales.
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Despite their specific body shape, seahorses
have gills, swim bladder and fins, just like all other fish.
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Color of the seahorse body
matches with its environment. Some species change their body color under
stress conditions or as a part of mating ritual.
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Seahorses
hold a Guinness World Record as the slowest swimmers in the ocean.
Dwarf seahorse swims
5 feet per hour.
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Seahorse can
move its fins 50 times in second, but that is not enough for efficient
movement. On the other hand, they are quite maneuverable and able to move
up, down, forward and backward.
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Seahorse can
be easily moved away by the sea current because of its tiny structure and
inability to swim fast. Luckily, it has a prehensile tail which allows it
to grab a coral branch or sea weed and prevent current-induced movement.
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Seahorses
eat plankton and small crustaceans. They do not have teeth and stomach and
food passes quickly through their body. Seahorses
are able to eat up to 3000 brine shrimp per day.
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Seahorses
interact with each other by producing the clicking sounds. These sounds are
also produced during meals.
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Some species of seahorses
are monogamous (they mate for life), while other stay together only during
a breeding season.
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The best known fact about seahorses
is that male carries the babies. Mating ritual is complex and it involves
dancing when seahorses
intertwine their tails and move around tangled. It may last for hours.
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Male seahorses
have a pouch on the front side of their body. When female deposits her eggs
inside the pouch, male fertilizes them internally. Male can carry up to
2000 babies at the time.
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Pregnancy lasts between two and five weeks.
Young seahorses
look like miniature versions of their parents.
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Only 1% of babies will live long enough to
reach the adulthood.
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Lifespan of most seahorse species
is between one and five years both in the wild and in the captivity.
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