About Phycodurus eques (Günther, 1865)
Leafy seadragons, with the scientific name Phycodurus eques (Günther, 1865), share close relation to seahorses, and their common name comes from their resemblance to the mythical dragon. Though not large, they grow slightly bigger than most seahorses, reaching a total length of 20–24 cm (8–9.5 in). They feed on plankton, small crustaceans, and larval fish, sucking prey in through their long, pipe-like snout. Common prey includes amphipods and mysid shrimp. The fleshy, leaf-like lobes of skin that grow across the leafy seadragon’s body work as camouflage, making the animal look just like seaweed. This illusion holds even when swimming, as the leafy seadragon moves through the water the same way a loose piece of floating seaweed does. Leafy seadragons can also change their body colour to better blend into their surroundings, but this ability depends on the individual’s diet, age, location, and stress level. Leafy seadragons are related to pipefish and belong to the family Syngnathidae, the same taxonomic family that includes seahorses. They differ from seahorses in overall appearance, how they move through water, and in that their tails cannot coil or grasp objects. The related weedy seadragon is smaller than the leafy seadragon, has multiple different colours, and grows weed-like fins rather than the leafy seadragon’s leafy skin lobes. One unique trait of the leafy seadragon is its small, circular gill openings that cover tufted gills; this is very different from the crescent-shaped gill openings and ridged gills found in most fish species. The leafy seadragon is endemic to southern Australian waters, with a range that extends westward from Wilson's Promontory in Victoria (its eastern limit) to Jurien Bay, 220 km (140 mi) north of Perth in Western Australia. It is commonly spotted by scuba divers near Adelaide in South Australia, particularly at Rapid Bay, Edithburgh, and Victor Harbor. Leafy seadragons most often live over sand patches in areas with kelp-covered rocks and seagrass clumps, at depths up to 50 m (160 ft). Researchers originally thought leafy seadragons had very small home ranges, but later work found they actually travel several hundred metres away from their usual sites, and can return to the same location using a strong sense of direction. Leafy seadragons typically lead a solitary lifestyle. When breeding season arrives, males court females, and pairs form to breed. Individuals are fully independent immediately after hatching, and reach full adult size and sexual maturity by two years of age. Like seahorses, male leafy seadragons are responsible for caring for developing eggs. A female produces up to 250 bright pink eggs, which she deposits onto the male’s tail using her ovipositor, a long tube-like structure. The eggs attach to a specialized brood patch on the male’s tail that supplies them with oxygen. Over the 9-week incubation period, the eggs change colour, ripening to purple or orange before hatching. The exact length of incubation depends on water conditions. To help the young emerge, the male pumps, shakes, and rubs his tail against seaweed and rock, and the hatching process takes 24 to 48 hours total to complete. Only around 5% of the deposited eggs survive to hatching. Every newborn leafy seadragon has a small yolk sac attached externally to its body that provides nourishment for its first few days of life. Even with this initial food source, most newborns instinctively hunt and catch prey right after hatching, and become fully self-sufficient before the yolk sac is used up. Newborns feed on small zooplankton until they grow large enough to hunt mysid shrimp.