Not really.
Seahorse females deposit their eggs into a male's pouch, who carries them until they hatch. But once hatched, the babies are outta there.
yes
In a pouch in front of them, on their stomach.
the babies are transferred into the male seahorses pouch, and when they are born they explode out of him , killing him :[
male carries the babies because they are stronger and can pretect the babies
Male seahorses dont lay eggs the female passes the fertilized eggs to a pouch in his abdomen where they hatch and he then gives"birth" to the babies.
males carry the babies
After seahorses mate, the male carries the eggs in a pouch. When it's time for the eggs to hatch, hundreds of tiny seahorses squirt out. Seahorses get their name because their head looks a bit like a seahorse.
Female seahorses don't have a pouch; they just have eggs. The males have a pouch where the female deposits up to 2,000 eggs. Biologists think seahorses developed the pouch as a way to ensure the species survives. For example, if a female had all the eggs and had to bear offspring, all the babies could die if she got eaten. If a male gets eaten, the most offspring lost is up to 2,000 eggs. But there are always other males that can mate with the female who has the eggs to deposit.
the men seahorses carry the baby and they carry it in their pouch. men seahorses can carry up to 2,000 baby seahorses in their pouch.
Kangaroos carry their babies in special pouches on their bellies.
The pouch is also called the "brood pouch".
Seahorses will court one another for several days before mating. When they mate, the female deposits up to 1,500 eggs into the males pouch located on one side of the body. The male then carries the eggs for up to 45 days and the babies come out of the pouch fully developed. Once they leave the pouch the baby seahorses are on their own.
seahorses have a kangaroo like pouch, in wich the male holds the babies. and seahorses have a tail like a monkeys tail to grab stuff. and sometimes with their tails they play tug-o-war! :-)