So far as science is concerned, male animals fertilize their female counterparts. The one and only male animal that can get pregnant from a female is a seahorse.
Seahorses are most commonly found in tropical waters that are warmer and have shallower depths.
Seahorses are found in shallow coastal waters in latitudes from about 52° N to 45° S. Their habitats include coral reefs, mangroves, sea grass beds, and estuaries. They are unique in appearance, with their horselike head, prehensile tail, independently moving eyes, and brood pouch.
A seahorse is a type of fish closely related to pipefishes and belonging to the scientific family Syngnathidae. Roughly 35 species of seahorse occur worldwide. The seahorse’s scientific genus name, Hippocampus, is Greek for “bent horse.”
The seahorse may appear as if it wears armor; its body is covered with bony rings and ridges.
Seahorses are well camouflaged among the relatively tall eelgrasses and seaweeds in which they make their homes. A seahorse often moors itself in the water by curling its prehensile tail around seagrass and coral branches.
Seahorse couples are essentially serial monogamists, sticking with one partner for long periods of time. Remaining committed to a single partner enables seahorses to pass through multiple reproduction cycles during each mating season, heightening the likelihood of successful, continuous procreation over time.
Every morning, seahorse couples engage in ritualistic dances to greet each other, moving through intricate, rhythmic sequences of twists and twirls for minutes to hours on end.
In insects, an ovipositor consists of a maximum of three pairs of appendages. The details and morphology of the ovipositor vary, but typically its form is adapted to functions such as preparing a place for the egg, transmitting the egg, and then placing it properly.
A female seahorse lays dozens, sometimes hundreds, of eggs in a pouch on the male seahorse’s abdomen. After seahorse moms make their eggs, they pass them over to the males to carry until the young are released. When it’s time to give birth, the dad pumps water through the pouch, releasing hundreds of fry, or baby seahorses, in just a few minutes. Called a brood pouch, it resembles a kangaroo’s pouch for carrying young. Seahorses young hatch after up to 45 days in the brood pouch.
The male is responsible for clearing a space on the porch by pumping water into it, where the female can then lay her eggs. The female will use her ovipositor to place the eggs on the front step. One of the coolest things about seahorses is that the mating process can last as long as eight hours.
After the male and female seahorses spend time courting, the female deposits her eggs inside the male’s pouch. The male then fertilizes the eggs inside the pouch. Instead of growing their babies inside a uterus like human moms do, seahorse dads carry their babies in a pouch.
It has been an exciting week for the widows of Kisumu County as Senatorial aspirant…
The President of the Institute of Engineering Kenya (IEK) Eng. Shammah Kiteme has warned Kapsaret…
As a testament to the depths of depreciation that Kenya's education system has slid into,…
Siaya Governor James Aggrey Bob Orengo has emphasised the Nyalore administration’s willingness to listen to…
Nominated Senator Gloria Orwoba is dating former Ghana President John Kufuor, this is according to…
SIAYA County Payroll Manager Jeconia Omondi has announced that no staff will earn a salary…