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Showing posts with label OCEAN CONSERVANCY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OCEAN CONSERVANCY. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

🐟 + 🐴 = ✨

 

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ANTONIO,

The ocean is full of weird and wild fish, but few are more eye-catching than seahorses. With the tail of a monkey, the face of a horse and the camouflage skills of an octopus, a seahorse is really one of a kind.

To celebrate these unusual fish (and yes—they are actually fish 🐟), here are three bits of seahorse trivia to brighten your day. Discover if you’re a seahorse expert below, and don’t forget to check out more seahorse facts on our website.

🐒 Seahorses have monkey-like tails. Seahorses have prehensile tails, also known as tails that can grab objects. Seahorses and their relatives are the only fishes who have them! This allows them to hold onto seagrass and other objects, unfortunately even marine debris.

🏊 Seahorses are terrible swimmers. They are slow, awkward and have a tough time getting around. If they need to travel long distances, they can hitchhike by using their monkey-like tails to attach themselves to objects like floating seaweed.

💯 Seahorses are excellent dads. For seahorses and their relatives, the males take on the majority of childcare. Females lay their eggs in a male seahorse’s brood pouch, and males will care for the young for weeks until they’re ready to be born. Then, they expel up to 1,000 baby seahorses into the world.

Can’t get enough seahorse trivia? Check out our site for more seahorse fun facts. I promise nothing will impress people more than some unusual fish facts (although, I might be biased).

See more seahorses >>

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For our ocean,

Michelle Frey
Senior Director, Digital Outreach
Ocean Conservancy


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Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Take action to protect seabirds

 

TAKE ACTION


Recently, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service identified 23 species that can no longer be found on the planet. As a result, they recommended these species be taken off the endangered species list and declared extinct.

Of these 23 species, 11 were birds.

Thankfully, the Biden administration has taken steps to help protect birds—but our feathery friends need more help.

Please take action today. Tell the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service you support further steps to protect birds.

The Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) is one of the oldest conservation laws on the books and has proved to be a bird’s best friend. For more than 100 years it has acted as a powerful protector, saving countless birds—like the Snowy Egret, Sandhill Crane and Wood Duck.

Extinction is forever. Take action today.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service should advance rule changes designed to ensure it can continue to use the MBTA to hold industries accountable if they harm birds—including amazing seabirds like the Atlantic Puffin and Brown Pelican.

The MBTA can have a big impact. When environmental catastrophes strike, like the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Prince William Sound, the law helps ensure that corporations are held accountable. Companies responsible for harming birds are fined, and the fines help fund critical conservation work to protect birds and their homes.

According to scientists at Audubon, two-thirds of bird species are at risk of extinction due to climate change.

Make your voice heard, tell the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to revise its rules to help protect our seabirds and other birds into the future.

For our ocean,

Andrew Hartsig
Arctic Program Director
Ocean Conservancy







Sunday, August 29, 2021

Dive in to learn more about seahorses

 


What ocean animal has a tail like a monkey, looks like a horse and can use camouflage like an octopus? A seahorse!

Did you know that a seahorse is actually a fish? Seahorses are closely related to pipefishes and seadragons. But, unlike most other fish, they swim upright.

And, unlike most fish, seahorses are terrible swimmers. They are slow, awkward and have a pretty tough time getting around. Because of this, seahorses are commonly found using their tails to wrap around underwater plants and corals. For the most part, they stay in one place.

You might ask, then, how is it that seahorses have been found traveling long distances? Excellent question! Seahorses are known to be hitchhikers. They will use their monkey-like tails to attach themselves to objects like floating seaweed (and, unfortunately, marine debris), allowing them to travel much further than they could on their own. Clever, huh?

The unique shape of seahorses gives them a stealthy advantage over their prey. Their horse-shaped heads minimize water disturbances, allowing them to move through the water silently, creeping up on their unsuspecting target. Wild fact: in good conditions, seahorses have a predatory kill rate of around 90%. To put that into perspective, great white sharks can have a kill rate of approximately 50% and lions have a kill rate of about 20% when hunting alone. Well now, the seahorse has earned some serious bragging rights over the world’s top predators!

Seahorses need a clean, healthy ocean environment in order to live and thrive. If you’re wondering how you can help ensure this and aren’t sure where to begin, we have a few resources to get you started.

  • Clean up with Clean Swell: Join our global movement to keep beaches, waterways and the ocean trash-free.
  • Take action: Keep our ocean free from plastics, like discarded bags and bottles.
  • Learn more: Visit Ocean Conservancy’s Trash Free Seas® program and see what we are doing.

We all need to do our part to keep the ocean free of marine debris for seahorses—and all the other marine life that call our ocean home.

For our ocean,

Michelle Frey
Senior Director, Digital Outreach
Ocean Conservancy





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