University of California, Davis (UCD)

1 Shields Ave, Davis California 95616

Seahorses

As of 2019, the Bales lab has been diving into a new study species: the lined seahorse!

We study the neurobiological and epigenetic factors relevant to social behaviors in this marine species. When someone mentions seahorses, you probably start thinking about their rare mating style of the males carrying and birthing the offspring. What we really find fascinating is what comes before the male pregnancy… and what comes after! Their pair bonding! More specifically, we’re interested in the neurobiological and epigenetic factors that induce the formation and maintenance of the pair bond. There is concern over the decline in wild stocks of seahorses due to the unsustainable use of seahorse-derived products in various markets, as well as bycatch, habitat loss and pollution. As a result, conservationists are interested in the potential for culturing seahorses to reduce fishing pressure on wild populations. Successful aquaculture of seahorses has yet to flourish due to the sparsity of published information about seahorse behavior in a captive environment. Behavioral studies are uniquely useful for aquaculture as they provide information about animal welfare, and environmental effects on reproduction, things both relevant to the tradeoff of intensifying procedures to increase production at the expense of stress that can affect survival and growth.

With this in mind, our team has set out on an exploration into the world of seahorses. Our main goals are:

1) Observing species typical courtship behaviors and trying to understand their function

2) Understanding neurobiological factors that overlap with other pair bonding species 

3) Finding similar patterns of ggene expression to more popularly studied pair bonding species.

Some ongoing projects are looking at pair bonding behavior across time and assessing the presence of general characteristics of pair bonding such as partner preferences, stress buffering, mate guarding, behavioral synchronization, and more! Additionally we are working with collaborators to understand seahorse luminance changes as well as analyzing the microbiome of seahorse tanks.