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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The evolutionary radiation of the family Syngnathidae was accompanied by a diversification of structures
involved in male parental care whose anatomical variations may signal differences in reproductive
strategies, with increasing egg protection possibly affecting female investment in offspring or larvae quality
at the end of the embryonic development phase. An analysis of egg numbers showed signi¢cant differences
between syngnathids with and without marsupium, suggesting that the brood pouch, besides increasing
protection to the male and its eggs, also introduced the ability to carry an additional number of o¡spring
per pregnancy, from one or more females. Curiously, even though larvae sizes do not significantly differ
between the considered brooding structures (controlling for male length), seahorse larvae were smaller
than expected, given the large volume of the pear-shaped eggs. These observations suggest that the sealed
seahorse pouch, although allowing the transport of a great number of offspring and capable of multiple
consecutive pregnancies, may impose serious functional constraints, namely those related with oxygenation
of the developing larvae, thus explaining the increased egg surface together with the presence of specific
salinity control mechanisms inside the marsupium.
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Citation
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 85, 1235-1241