What's been spotted in New South Wales?

Spiny seahorse

Hippocampus histrix

Depth 8m
Hippocampus histrix

About this species

This seahorse is encountered less regularly than most other species and can be easy to misidentify. As with all seahorse species the body shape is the first indicator that you are viewing a seahorse - elongate with a distinct head and snout, a tail that is almost always curled, bony plates equally spaced and easily visible under the skin and a belly that is usually thicker than the neck and tail sections. The thorny seahorse can be identified by the spine-like projections originating from the edges of the bony plates from the head all the way through to the tail. The snout is longer than many other seahorse species and is banded or spotted in white in most individuals. Colour is variable and can include yellow, green, pink, red, brown and many shades in between. The body is not unicolour and commonly has white blotching throughout. The colour generally matches the surrounding substrate and structure (seagrass, rocks or coral) to assist in the camouflage of the species. Read more…

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