C. Kvarnemo et al., Monogamous pair bonds and mate switching in the Western Australian seahorse Hippocampus subelongatus, J EVOL BIOL, 13(6), 2000, pp. 882-888
Apparently monogamous animals often prove, upon genetic inspection, to mate
polygamously. Seahorse males provide care in a brood pouch. An earlier gen
etic study of the Western Australian seahorse demonstrated that males mate
with only one female for each particular brood. Here we investigate whether
males remain monogamous in sequential pregnancies during a breeding season
. In a natural population we tagged males and sampled young from two succes
sive broods of 14 males. Microsatellite analyses of parentage revealed that
eight males re-mated with the same female, and six with a new female. Thus
, in this first study to document long-term genetic monogamy in a seahorse,
we show that switches of mates still occur. Polygynous males moved greater
distances between broods, and tended to have longer interbrood intervals,
than monogamous males, suggesting substantial costs associated with the bre
aking of pair bonds which may explain the high degree of social monogamy in
this fish genus.