For more than a decade, researchers at the New
England Aquarium in Boston have been trying to breed some of the most elusive
and enchanting fish under the sea. Lacy and delicate, sea dragons live only in
the waters along Australia’s southern coast, and their small habitat and
limited range make them an ideal candidate for in-captivity breeding.
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Since 2008, the aquarists have tried to replicate the sea
dragons’ natural habitat. They have changed the temperature of the sea dragon
tank to match the seasons of the southern hemisphere. They have adjusted the
amount of light in the exhibit. They got a taller tank. None of it worked.
Aquarists hope that breeding these fickle creatures in captivity will lead to fewer sea dragons being collected from their native sea grass habitat, which is under increasing stress from climate change and runoff from storms.
“I had kind of given up and thought it’s never going to
happen,” said Jeremy Brodt, an aquarist and galleries manager at the New
England Aquarium.
And then, “out of the blue”, Brodt said, “it happened”.
Last May, aquarium staff members discovered that a male
weedy sea dragon was successfully carrying his mate’s eggs. The aquarium
announced last week that the eggs had hatched in mid-July, and that aquarists
have been raising 18 baby dragons since then.
It is the first time the New England Aquarium has
successfully bred and hatched the weedy variety of the species, making it one
of about 15 instances of scientific institutions that have bred sea dragons in
30 years, since they first appeared in aquarium displays, Brodt said. The Birch
Aquarium at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego celebrated the
arrival of more than 70 weedy sea dragon babies a few weeks ago.
Aquarists hope that breeding these fickle creatures in
captivity will lead to fewer sea dragons being collected from their native sea
grass habitat, which is under increasing stress from climate change and runoff
from storms. Sea dragons, which are primarily of the leafy or weedy varieties,
are not currently threatened, but the Australian government has strict
regulations that allow only a limited number of them to be collected for public
display in aquariums. Still, scientists are worried that the animals’ already
limited habitat may be contracting.
“They’re a great, phenomenal animal, they get people’s
attention,” Brodt said. “It’s a way to get that message across and talk about
these unique animals and the issues that they’re facing.”
A delicate danceThat is easier said than done, in large part because of the
mysteries surrounding their optimal — and very complicated — mating habits.
“That first year, it’s crazy. They’re about two centimeters when they hatch and look like floating grape stems. They grow about one centimeter a week for several months.”
Like their sea horse cousins, male sea dragons are
responsible for carrying the species’ eggs to term and can have more than 150
eggs attached to their tails. Their elaborate mating ritual involves male and
female sea dragons mirroring each other, moving together as they spin upward
through the water. During their dance, the female sea dragon transfers her eggs
to a patch on the underside of her partner’s tail, where he fertilizes and
carries them. If the transfer is interrupted somehow — by competing love
interests, for example, or even clumsiness — the eggs may drop or end up
unfertilized.
No one has ever seen a leafy sea dragon mate in the wild,
said Greg Rouse, a marine biologist at Scripps who was not involved in the New
England Aquarium’s project, and aquarists have not been able to breed them in
captivity.
A male sea dragon
carrying eggs.
To protect the male sea dragon from bumping the eggs off his
tail, aquarists at the New England Aquarium moved him to his own smaller
holding tank to be monitored. Once the eggs hatched, the team gently removed
the baby sea dragons and placed them in a tank stocked with highly nutritious
food. The young sea dragons do not have names (they look too much alike), but
researchers are monitoring their behavioral patterns.
Baby dragonsToday, the eight-month-old sea dragons are about 15cm long
and may grow up to a foot long. The aquarium plans to put them on display this
summer.
“They’re pretty impressive specimens when they’re adults,”
Brodt said. “That first year, it’s crazy. They’re about two centimeters when
they hatch and look like floating grape stems. They grow about one centimeter a
week for several months.”
So what made this a successful pregnancy?The researchers were considering moving some of the adult
sea dragons out of their display and into a larger tank to give them more space
to float when they discovered the egg transfer had already occurred in the
existing exhibit. Two developments may have helped the breeding effort, Brodt
said: The aquarium had a surplus of live food to dole out (adult sea dragons
are primarily fed frozen food with some live supplements), and because of
natural population fluctuations, there were fewer sea dragons in the tank at
the time.
“It could have been eating at the right time and getting
this influx of nutrition,” he said. “It could have also been pure luck and
everything worked.”
Rouse, the Scripps marine biologist, said both food and
space were likely factors in the success.
Because sea dragons “bond up as pairs in the wild and they don’t hang around in big groups, maybe they get a little bit disturbed if there’s too many in a tank with them”.
Because sea dragons “bond up as pairs in the wild and they
don’t hang around in big groups, maybe they get a little bit disturbed if
there’s too many in a tank with them,” Rouse said. Food quality, he added, was
“certainly” a factor.
Even so, the hormonal “synchronization” between a male and a
female has to line up perfectly. Moon phase and water temperatures also
probably play a role in their reproduction.
The success of one aquarium is a success for all, Rouse
said.
“Anything that will take pressure off sea dragons, the
better it is,” he said.
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