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Korean Seahorse Spawning | Hippocampus haema

This is a pair of Korean seahorses (Hippocampus haema) engaged in spawning. The lighter-colored female on the left is depositing eggs into the brooding pouch of the male (right, looking toward the camera). The male’s pouch is swollen and distended to make room for the eggs, which he fertilizes once they are deposited. The male broods the eggs for three to ten weeks. After hatching the juveniles, the male engages in courtship with the female and mates again throughout the spring and summer breeding season. Pair bonds are reasonably consistent, though there seems to be some mixing that takes place. Described in 2017, this species is found in the waters of Korea, as well as along the southern and western coasts of Japan.

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Copyright Tony Wu. All rights reserved. No duplication, reproduction or usage without prior written permission.
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Bony Fish Seahorse Animalia Chordata Osteichthyes Actinopterygii Syngnathiformes Syngnathidae Hippocampus haema Himetatsu Korean Seahorse CITES Appendix 2 Reproduction Spawning Courtship Pacific Japan Kumamoto Prefecture
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Marine Life Reproduction, Fish Photos, Marine Life | Japan
This is a pair of Korean seahorses (Hippocampus haema) engaged in spawning. The lighter-colored female on the left is depositing eggs into the brooding pouch of the male (right, looking toward the camera). The male’s pouch is swollen and distended to make room for the eggs, which he fertilizes once they are deposited. The male broods the eggs for three to ten weeks. After hatching the juveniles, the male engages in courtship with the female and mates again throughout the spring and summer breeding season. Pair bonds are reasonably consistent, though there seems to be some mixing that takes place. Described in 2017, this species is found in the waters of Korea, as well as along the southern and western coasts of Japan.
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