Male seahorses carry the offspring, not the females.
Seahorses seahorses look after ofspring exclusively
The mother seahorses that tried to carry the eggs were not competitive with the mother seahorses who deposited their eggs in the brood pouches of the male seahorses. The genes of the ones who had more offspring survived.
The survival of seahorses is low because they have many predators. Offspring are also produced in small numbers which further makes their population dwindle fast.
No they dont, also I think the male Seahorse may have offspring of their own.
Male seahorses do not die after giving birth. Unlike most other species, male seahorses have a unique reproductive system where they carry and give birth to the offspring. After giving birth, they can continue to mate and reproduce in subsequent breeding cycles.
Female seahorses don't have a pouch; they just have eggs. The males have a pouch where the female deposits up to 2,000 eggs. Biologists think seahorses developed the pouch as a way to ensure the species survives. For example, if a female had all the eggs and had to bear offspring, all the babies could die if she got eaten. If a male gets eaten, the most offspring lost is up to 2,000 eggs. But there are always other males that can mate with the female who has the eggs to deposit.
There are male seahorses and female seahorses.
Seahorses are unique in that the males give birth to the offspring. They also have a prehensile tail that they use to anchor themselves to vegetation in the ocean. Seahorses are slow swimmers and rely on camouflage to hide from predators.
Seahorses Seahorses
Seahorses live in the sea.
The Seahorses was created in 1996.