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Showing posts with label Seahorse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seahorse. Show all posts

Monday, May 19, 2014

Dive Sightings – Seahorses

When diving, one of the most amazing things that you can find lurking around the coral reefs would be seahorses. These wonderful creatures look so fragile and mysterious that they attract so many marine biologists to study more about their life under water.

Here are a few interesting facts about these animals.

There are around 40 different kinds of seahorse species. They’re commonly seen in pairs where they swim together with tails linked. These animals, like crabs, have very little natural predators. The seahorse’s body is too boney to digest. They’re also masters in camouflage. They mimic the color of sea weeds and other underwater plants.

Seahorses swim upright. They propel themselves using a very small fin found on their back which can flutter 35 times in a second. They steer themselves around with smaller fins found below the back of their heads. When they’re not swimming, they stay close to the reef, anchored to corals and sea grasses. Their long snouts are used for feeding, sucking small crustaceans and plankton that drift near. However, seahorses are actually really bad swimmers due to their fragile body shape. They easily get too tiered and even perish of exhaustion during stormy weather.

Their eating habits are very strange. They don’t have teeth or stomachs. What it eats passes through its digestive system so quickly that they constantly need to keep eating tiny fish and plankton to stay alive. They eat about 3,000 brine shrimps per day, which is a lot considering their size.


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Monday, December 9, 2013

The Mystery of the Seahorse and its Peculiar Shapebe



The seahorse, as you most likely know, gets its name from having a bent neck and long snouts that resemble horses. This unique fish, with its odd-shaped body that doesn’t even have a tail fin, gives it the distinction of being one of the slowest swimmers in the world. According to marine biologist Brad Gemmell of the University of Texas at Austin, seahorses don’t swim all that much, choosing instead to anchor themselves with prehensile tails to seagrass, much like monkeys do. 
seahorse
Since seahorses seem to be poor swimmers, just how do they find food? This is the question Gemmell and his colleagues sought to answer in their research, investigating how these unique fish feed on miniscule crustaceans known as copepods.

Copepods, which look like shrimp but only on a microscopic level, are a crucial part of the marine food chain, as Gemmell points out. They’re fed on a by a huge variety of marine animals, particularly during the early stages of their lives. And yes, they’re also fed on by most of the commercially harvested fish we know today.

Being a type of prey animal highly fed on by fish, have evolved to come armed with some effective escape behaviour. These critters are sensitive to water disturbances, in particular, movements in the water made by approaching predators.

When in flight mode, copepods can swim distances over 500 times their body size per second. That’s incredible, considering that the fastest land animal, the cheetah, can only do 30 times its body length per second. If humans had the same speed of a copepod, they could run close to 2,000 miles per hour.

It’s interesting to note that despite being slow swimmers, seahorses excelled at capturing the quicker, highly evasive copepods. Their body shape allows them to drift without disturbing the water, while their prehensile tails allow them to stay stationary and wait for prey. 


Learn more about the seahorse on Discovery News.
 

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Friday, November 29, 2013

Seahorses stalk their prey by stealth

Seahorses may appear slow and awkward but they are ferocious and ingenious predators, according to a new study.
Seahorses stalk their prey by stealth
The beautiful creatures are famously bad swimmers, but they have a secret weapon to sneak up on their prey.

Source: here
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