Bargibant's seahorse
A species of Seahorses, Also known as Bargibant's pygmy seahorse Scientific name : Hippocampus bargibanti Genus : Seahorses
Bargibant's seahorse, A species of Seahorses
Also known as:
Bargibant's pygmy seahorse
Botanical name: Hippocampus bargibanti
Genus: Seahorses
Content
Description
Description
The pygmy seahorse is well camouflaged and extremely difficult to spot amongst the gorgonian coral it inhabits. So effective is this camouflage that the species wasn't actually discovered until its host gorgonian was being examined in a laboratory. In 1969, a New Caledonian scientist, Georges Bargibant, was collecting specimens of Muricella gorgonians for the Nouméa museum and whilst one of these was on his dissection table he happened to notice a pair of tiny seahorses. The next year they were officially named by Whitley as "Bargibant's pygmy seahorse." Large, bulbous tubercles cover its body and match the colour and shape of the polyps of its host species of gorgonian coral, while its body matches the gorgonian stem. It is not known whether individuals can change colour if they change hosts, although the ability to change colour according to their surroundings does exist in some other seahorse species, such as Hippocampus whitei. Other distinctive pygmy seahorse characteristics include a fleshy head and body, a very short snout, and a long, prehensile tail. This is also one of the smallest seahorse species in the world, typically measuring less than 2 centimetres (0.79 in) in height.
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Photo By Steve Childs , used under CC-BY-2.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
Scientific Classification
Phylum
Chordates Class
Fish Order
Seahorses and pipefishes Family
Pipefishes and seahorses Genus
Seahorses Species
Bargibant's seahorse