This aquatic candy cane is called a banded pipefish. You won"t find it at the North Pole or on your Christmas tree, but in the tropical seas of the Indo-Pacific region, from Australia and Japan to the Philippines and South Africa. It"s in the same family as the seahorse, and like its cousin, the pipefish has plates of bony armor covering its body. This gives it protection, but a rigid body (like a candy cane!), so it swims by rapidly fanning its fins. Also like the seahorse, it"s the male pipefish—not the female—who carries the eggs. After an elaborate courtship dance, the female deposits her eggs in the male"s brood pouch, where they develop until the male gives birth. We"re not making this stuff up, but we can"t vouch for the theory that the red-and-white banded pipefish has a minty taste.
Swimming into the season
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Drop in on International Surfing Day
-
Happy Easter!
-
Merry Christmas!
-
Happy Thanksgiving
-
Happy Pi Day!
-
The Bahamas
-
Tulips, Netherlands
-
Belgium celebrates its independence
-
Celebrating Madagascar on its Independence Day
-
Rolling hills of the Palouse, Washington
-
Diwali
-
A duckling swimming in a water meadow, Suffolk, England
-
International Day of the Worlds Indigenous Peoples
-
A tale of almonds and bees
-
River otters at Acadia National Park, Maine
-
Asteroid Day
-
The crossroads of empires
-
National Llama Day
-
Hippo family in Chobe National Park, Botswana
-
A state-of-the-art lookout on the Rock of Gibraltar
-
Climb a tree for wild animals and plants
-
World Book Day
-
Autumnal equinox
-
Bellissima!
-
Trunks stick together
-
World Environment Day
-
Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada
-
A Eurasian lynx in Siberia
-
Stuben am Arlberg, Austria
-
A good time in the Badlands
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

