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The Yellow/Spotted seahorse is one of the more heavily exploited species in both traditional medicines and marine aquarium trades

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Catch monitoring and surveys were used to assess the seahorse trade in Vietnam. Despite low daily catch rates, potentially 6.5 t of dried seahorses (2.2 million seahorses) were taken annually as...

Effect of parental age and associated size on fecundity, growth and survival in the yellow seahorse Hippocampus kuda

TitleEffect of parental age and associated size on fecundity, growth and survival in the yellow seahorse Hippocampus kuda
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsDzyuba, B, Van Look KJW, Cliffe A, Koldewey HJ, Holt WV
JournalJournal of Experimental Biology
Volume209
Issue16
Pagination3055 - 3061
Date Published08/2006
ISSN1477-9145
Keywordsattachment site, Barker hypothesis, embryo, foetal origins hypothesis, Hippocampus kuda, post-natal growth, pouch, yellow seahorse
Abstract

Seahorses, together with the pipefishes (Family Syngnathidae), are the only vertebrates in which embryonic development takes place within a specialised body compartment, the brood pouch, of the male instead of the female. Embryos develop in close association with the brood pouch epithelium in a manner that bears some resemblance to embryo-placental relationships in mammals. We have explored the hypothesis that parental body size and age should affect offspring postnatal growth and survival if brood pouch quality impacts upon prenatal embryonic nutrition or respiration. Using an aquarium population of the yellow seahorse, Hippocampus kuda, we show here that large parents produce offspring whose initial postnatal growth rates (weeks one to three) were significantly higher than those of the offspring of younger and smaller parents. Whereas 90% of offspring from the larger parents survived for the duration of the study (7 weeks), less that 50% of offspring from smaller parents survived for the same period. For the offspring of large parents, growth rates from individual males were negatively correlated with the number of offspring in the cohort (r=-0.82; P<0.05); this was not the case for offspring from small parents (r=0.048; P>0.9). Observations of embryos within the pouch suggested that when relatively few embryos are present they may attach to functionally advantageous sites and thus gain physiological support during gestation. These results suggest that male body size, and pouch size and function, may influence the future fitness and survival of their offspring.

DOI10.1242/jeb.02336
Short TitleJournal of Experimental Biology