Almost. The female sea horse lays her eggs in a pouch on the male sea horse's belly. When the eggs hatch then the male does go through a sort of labour and delivery, but not really. Note* sometimes a miss-hap happens when they do that and the male ends up delivering the babies or dieing.
No, only females.It is just like human even though male sea horses incubate the eggs the females still lay them.
no the only male animal that can lay eggs are sea horses
The female deposits the eggs in a pouch on the male seahorse's stomachs. When the eggs hatch, the pouch opens, and tiny, tiny sea horses swim out.
It's the female who make the eggs, but she deposits them in a pouch on the male seahorse's stomach for him to carry while the egs develop. When the eggs hatch, the pouch opens, and tiny, tiny sea horses swim out to start their own lives.
The female lays eggs in the pouch on the stomach of the male. The eggs develop in that pouch, then the live sea horse babies come out of the eggs and out of the male's pouch.
They carry them in a pouch on their stomachs. When the eggs hatch, the pouch opens, and tiny, tiny sea horses swim out.
The eggs take 45 to 75 days to hatch.
There are only male sea horses no female
No. It's the female who make the eggs, but she deposits them in a pouch on the male seahorse's stomach for him to carry while the eggs develop. When the eggs hatch, the pouch opens, and tiny, tiny sea horses swim out to start their own lives.
No, they are fertilized, then drift until they hatch. The young are on their on from the start.
You don't really have to have a male seahorse if you have a female sea horse but if you want to have little baby sea horses you can have a male sea horse. If i were you i would want a male sea horse for company for the female.
Basically it doesn't. Sea horses have an unusual arrangement where the female deposit her eggs in a pouch on the male's stomach for him to carry them as the eggs develop. But once the eggs hatch, the pouch opens and the tiny, tiny sea horses (perfect copies of the adult animals) swim out and are left to survive on their own.