Introduction Embryonic growth and development require efficient respiratory gas exchange. Internal incubation of developing young thus presents a significant physiological challenge, because respiratory gas diffusion to embryos is impeded by the additional barrier of parental tissue between the embryo and the environment. Therefore, live-bearing species exhibit a variety of adaptations facilitating respiratory gas exchange between the parent (usually the mother) and embryos. Syngnathid fishes are the only vertebrates to exhibit male pregnancy, allowing comparative studies of the biology and evolution of internal incubation of embryos, independent of the female reproductive tract. Here, we examine the fleshy, sealed, seahorse brood pouch, an...
The pipefish brood pouch presents a unique mode of parental care that enables males to protect, osmo...
Seahorses are teleosts that have evolved a brood pouch analogous to the mammalian uterus. Attempts t...
Sex role reversal is not uncommon in the animal kingdom but is taken to the extreme by the Syngnathi...
Introduction Embryonic growth and development require efficient respiratory gas exchange. Internal i...
Introduction Syngnathids (seahorses, pipefishes and seadragons) are among the few vertebrates that d...
Viviparity (live birth) has evolved more than 150 times in vertebrates, and represents an excellent ...
Viviparity (live birth) has evolved more than 150 times in vertebrates, and represents an excellent ...
Abstract Background The reproductive strategies of vertebrates are diverse. Seahorses (Pisces: Syngn...
Vertebrates that incubate embryos on or within the body cavity exhibit diverse strategies to provide...
Embryogenesis of the dwarf seahorse, Hippocampus zosterae, was studied by scanning electron microsco...
For animals that reproduce in water, many adaptations in life-history traits such as egg size, paren...
The evolutionary radiation of the family Syngnathidae was accompanied by a diversification of struct...
The pipefish brood pouch presents a unique mode of parental care that enables males to protect, osmo...
Embryos of the viviparous dwarf ornate wobbegong shark (Orectolobus ornatus) develop without a place...
© 2020 Cambridge Philosophical Society The seahorses, pipefishes and seadragons (Syngnathidae) are a...
The pipefish brood pouch presents a unique mode of parental care that enables males to protect, osmo...
Seahorses are teleosts that have evolved a brood pouch analogous to the mammalian uterus. Attempts t...
Sex role reversal is not uncommon in the animal kingdom but is taken to the extreme by the Syngnathi...
Introduction Embryonic growth and development require efficient respiratory gas exchange. Internal i...
Introduction Syngnathids (seahorses, pipefishes and seadragons) are among the few vertebrates that d...
Viviparity (live birth) has evolved more than 150 times in vertebrates, and represents an excellent ...
Viviparity (live birth) has evolved more than 150 times in vertebrates, and represents an excellent ...
Abstract Background The reproductive strategies of vertebrates are diverse. Seahorses (Pisces: Syngn...
Vertebrates that incubate embryos on or within the body cavity exhibit diverse strategies to provide...
Embryogenesis of the dwarf seahorse, Hippocampus zosterae, was studied by scanning electron microsco...
For animals that reproduce in water, many adaptations in life-history traits such as egg size, paren...
The evolutionary radiation of the family Syngnathidae was accompanied by a diversification of struct...
The pipefish brood pouch presents a unique mode of parental care that enables males to protect, osmo...
Embryos of the viviparous dwarf ornate wobbegong shark (Orectolobus ornatus) develop without a place...
© 2020 Cambridge Philosophical Society The seahorses, pipefishes and seadragons (Syngnathidae) are a...
The pipefish brood pouch presents a unique mode of parental care that enables males to protect, osmo...
Seahorses are teleosts that have evolved a brood pouch analogous to the mammalian uterus. Attempts t...
Sex role reversal is not uncommon in the animal kingdom but is taken to the extreme by the Syngnathi...