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Bay Pipefish (Sygnathus leptorhynchus)

By Dr. Abby L. Schwarz

 

 

Bay Pipefish Taxonomy and description

 

The bay pipefish, also known as the slender-nosed pipefish, has the scientific name Syngnathus leptorhynchus. It is also known by the synonym griseolineatus. The bay pipefish is in the Order Gasterosteiformes which includes seahorses, other species of pipefishes, sticklebacks, tubesnouts and sea moths.  All have armor plates of some sort and small mouths.  Members of the family Syngnathidae, containing 200 species of pipefishes and 25 species of seahorses, all have characteristic armor, cryptic coloration, and secretive behaviour. They lack streamlining and speed, but are nevertheless very successful and are found world-wide in shallow marine waters and sometimes in fresh water.

 

Hybridization can be an important source of novel genetic variation, and may increase the adaptive potential of wild populations. While hybridization has not been previously reported in syngnathid fishes, the sympatric occurrence of closely related species at high densities has increased interest in the probability of interspecies mating in this group. Five species of Syngnathus frequent eelgrass beds along the southern California coast. Exceptionally high levels of genetic diversity occur in southern populations of Syngnathus leptorhynchus.  For example, S. leptorhynchus and S. auliscus occur in high densities at a site in San Diego Bay where their population genetics have been examined by means of microsatellite genotyping and mitochondrial sequencing (Wilson 2006a). Adult hybrids were not found in the study population, but analysis of male broods indicated that mating was occurring between the two species.  The lack of pre-mating isolating mechanisms between these two relatives suggested that hybridization may be common in sympatric species of Syngnathus (Wilson 2006a).   

 

The bay pipefish is long and thin (standard length 2.5-33 cm or longer); in fact, it is one of the most elongated species in the genus. Females grow larger than males (Hart 1973, Bayer 1980).  Scales are replaced by bony rings. There is no lateral line canal.  The snout is tube-like and the mouth is terminal. Pelvic fins are absent in S. leptorhynchus and many other pipefish, and the remaining fins are minute.  There is clear sexual dimorphism: the males have an abdominal brood pouch conspicuously lacking in females. As well, only the females have an anal fin (Hart 1973).  

 

Bay pipefish propel themselves by undulating the dorsal fin and vibrating the pectoral fins while assuming various body postures (Hart 1973).  Colouration varies from pale green to dark green or brown depending on their surroundings. Some species can change colour to match their environment but it is not known whether the bay pipefish is one of these.   

 

 

Bay Pipefish Distribution

 

Pipefishes generally inhabit warm and temperate seas, and several species are found in fresh water. The bay pipefish, Syngnathus leptorhynchus, is a near-shore Pacific coast species with an exceptionally wide latitudinal distribution, ranging from Bahia Santa Maria, Baja California to Prince William Sound, Alaska. S. leptorhynchus is experiencing a range expansion at the northern limit of its range, consistent with colonization from southern populations (Wilson 2006b). 

 

In British Columbia it has been recorded from the Strait of Georgia, Loughborough Inlet, and the Queen Charlotte Islands (Hart 1973).  It is common in eelgrass meadows, where it is effectively camouflaged by its greenish color, its long, thin shape resembling an eelgrass leaf, and its ability to orient itself parallel to eelgrass leaves. It is sometimes taken in shallow offshore waters, but may be found at depths of 30 m. 

 

 

Bay Pipefish Life history, behaviour and research

 

S. leptorhynchus, like other pipefishes, feeds on large quantities of tiny crustaceans (e.g. amphipods, copepods, decapod larvae).  As in seahorses, the mouth acts like a vacuum cleaner, sucking in plankton food, rather than biting its prey.  They can suck in small crustaceans from some distance away after locating the prey precisely with their binocular vision (Moyle and Cech 2004).

 

In B.C., spawning in the bay pipefish appears to occur in late spring and in summer.  Egg-carrying males have been found as early as late May, and young as late as August.  Bay pipefish are sex-role reversed.  Hart (1973) describes an elaborate reproductive ritual in which the male shakes himself, nods his head, and periodically assumes a rigid vertical S position, while the female twines herself around him and then transfers the fertilized eggs to the male’s brood pouch. Male pipefish carry the developing young for several weeks. Large males can be pregnant with over 900 young.   Because this mating system requires a high investment of energy by the males, they can be very choosy about their mates, preferring larger females (which produce larger eggs) (Berglund 1995). Some species exhibit intra-female competition for males. There is no information on this for the bay pipefish, but a report of a female-biased sex ratio in one study population (Bayer 1980) suggests that this is a possibility.

 

Some species are monogamous; others allow multiple females to lay eggs in their pouches (Jones and Avise 1997). Bayer (2006) states that S. leptorhynchus males mate with more than one female, but it is not known whether a female mates with more than one male. 

 

Embryonic development is completed in the male’s pouch and the young are released at about 19 mm length (Hart 1973) as swimming juveniles. Several syngnathids can change sex, but S. leptorhynchus does not appear to be one of these (Vincent et al. 1992).

 

 

Bay Pipefish Conservation

 

The greatest potential threat to pipefish is loss of eelgrass habitat. There is no commercial fishery for pipefishes, and many of the details of their biology and requirements are not well known.  However, like seahorses, pipefishes are collected from the wild for the Chinese medicinal trade, although apparently in somewhat smaller quantities. Pipefishes are considered more medicinally potent than seahorses; ground and mixed with various herbs, they are used for “whole-body” treatment, whereas the less-potent seahorse is generally used to target specific ailments.  The demand for pipefishes is currently being met by collection from the wild, but continuing this practice will lead to the same decline of pipefish that has occurred with seahorses (Burhans no date). 

 

References

Bayer, R. D. 1980.  Size, seasonality and sex ratios of the bay pipefish (Syngnathus leptorhynchus) in Oregon.   Northwest Science 54:161–167.

Berglund, A., 1995.  Many mates make male pipefish choosy.  Behaviour 32: 213-218.

 

Brunsman, D. and F. Ratti, 1979.  Coos Bay Estuary Inventory and Study.  Coos County Planning Dept, Oregon.   https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/5913.

 

Burhans, R.A. (no date; post-1998) Pipefish husbandry and propagation.  http://www.utahreefs.com/articles/Pipefish_final.pdf.   (Note: Robert A. Burhans is the Aquarium Curator at the Birch Aquarium, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Univ. Calif. San Diego.)

 

Hart, J.L., 1973.  Pacific Fishes of Canada.  Pp. 278-279.  Fish. Res. Bd Can., Bull. 180.  740 pp. Ottawa.

 

Jones, A.G. and J.C. Avise, 1997.  Polygynandry in the dusky pipefish Syngnathus floridae  revealed by microsatellite DNA markers.  Evolution 51: 1611-1622.

 

Lamb, A. and B.P. Hanby, 2005.  Marine Life of the Pacific Northwest.  Harbour Publ., Madeira Park BC.

 

Moyle, P.B. and J.J. Cech Jr., 2004.  Fishes: An Introduction to Ichthyology.  5e. Prentice-Hall, NJ.

 

Vincent, A., I. Ahnesjo, A. Berglund and G. Rosenqvist, 1992.  Pipefish and seahorses: Are they all sex role reversed? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 7:237–241.

 

Wilson, A.B., 2006a. Interspecies mating in sympatric species of Syngnathus pipefish. Molecular Ecology 15 (3): 809-824.

 

Wilson, A.B., 2006b. Genetic signature of recent glaciation on populations of a near-shore marine fish species (Syngnathus leptorhynchus).  Molec. Ecology 15 (7): 1857-1871.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
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