East Bay Times

Scientists learn how to breed sea dragons, but not by the seashore

- By Remy Tumin

For more than a decade, researcher­s at the New England Aquarium in Boston have been trying to breed some of the most elusive and enchanting fish under the sea. Lacy and delicate, sea dragons live only in the waters along Australia's southern coast, and their small habitat and limited range make them an ideal candidate for incaptivit­y breeding.

Since 2008, the aquarists have tried to replicate the sea dragons' natural habitat. They have changed the temperatur­e of the sea dragon tank to match the seasons of the Southern Hemisphere. They have adjusted the amount of light in the exhibit. They got a taller tank. None of it worked.

“I had kind of given up and thought it's never going to happen,” said Jeremy Brodt, an aquarist and galleries manager at the New England Aquarium.

And then “out of the blue,” Brodt said, “it happened.”

Last May, aquarium staff members discovered that a male weedy sea dragon was successful­ly carrying his mate's eggs. The aquarium announced Wednesday that the eggs had hatched in mid-July, and that aquarists have been raising 18 baby dragons since then.

It is the first time the New England Aquarium successful­ly has bred and hatched the weedy variety of the species, making it one of about 15 instances of scientific institutio­ns that have bred sea dragons in 30 years, since they first appeared in aquarium displays, Brodt said. The Birch Aquarium at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy in San Diego celebrated the arrival of more than 70 weedy sea dragon babies a few weeks ago.

Aquarists hope that breeding these fickle creatures in captivity will lead to fewer sea dragons being collected from their native sea grass habitat, which is under increasing stress from climate change and runoff from storms. Sea dragons, which are primarily of the leafy or weedy varieties, are not currently threatened, but the Australian government has strict regulation­s that allow only a limited number of them to be collected for public display in aquariums.

Still, scientists are worried that the animals' already limited habitat may be contractin­g.

“They're a great, phenomenal animal; they get people's attention,” Brodt said. “It's a way to get that message across and talk about these unique animals and the issues that they're facing.”

 ?? NEW ENGLAND AQUARIUM VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A male sea dragon carrying eggs. The New England Aquarium has raised 18 baby sea dragons since July.
NEW ENGLAND AQUARIUM VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A male sea dragon carrying eggs. The New England Aquarium has raised 18 baby sea dragons since July.

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