Sperm transport and male pregnancy in seahorses: An unusual model for reproductive science

The Syngnathidae (seahorses and pipefishes) are a group of teleost fishes in which, uniquely, developing embryos are hosted throughout pregnancy by males, using a specialized brood pouch situated on the abdomen or tail. Seahorses have evolved the most advanced form of brood pouch, whereby zygotes an...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAnimal reproduction science Vol. 246; p. 106854
Main Authors Holt, William V., Fazeli, Alireza, Otero-Ferrer, Francisco
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.11.2022
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Summary:The Syngnathidae (seahorses and pipefishes) are a group of teleost fishes in which, uniquely, developing embryos are hosted throughout pregnancy by males, using a specialized brood pouch situated on the abdomen or tail. Seahorses have evolved the most advanced form of brood pouch, whereby zygotes and embryos are intimately connected to the host’s circulatory system and also bathed in pouch fluid. The pouch is closed to the external environment and has to perform functions such as gaseous exchange, removal of waste and maintenance of appropriate osmotic conditions, much like the mammalian placenta. Fertilization of the oocytes occurs within the brood pouch, but unlike the mammalian situation the sperm transport mechanism from the ejaculatory duct towards the pouch is unclear, and the sperm: egg ratio (about 5:1) is possibly the least of any vertebrate. In this review, there is highlighting of the difficulty of elucidating the sperm transport mechanism, based on studies of Hippocampus kuda. The similarities between seahorse pouch function and the mammalian placenta have led to suggestions that the pouch provides important nutritional support for the developing embryos, supplementing the nutritional functions of the yolk sac provided by the oocytes. In this review, there is a description of the recent evidence in support of this hypothesis, and also emphasis, as in mammals, that embryonic development depends on nutritional support from the placenta-like pouch at important stages of the gestational period (“critical windows”). •Pregnancy takes place in males with embryos developing in a brood pouch.•Embryos become attached to the inner walls of the brood pouch.•The seahorse pouch is functionally similar to the mammalian placenta.•The developing embryos receive paternal nutritional support.
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ISSN:0378-4320
1873-2232
DOI:10.1016/j.anireprosci.2021.106854