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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