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:
-
Summer winds down in the Hamptons
-
Lionfish off the coast of Indonesia
-
Tulips at Emirgan Park in Istanbul, Türkiye
-
A spectacle unlike any other
-
National Park Week: Olympic National Park, Washington
-
A peek at an explosive peak
-
A hermitage with a view
-
Great horned owl near Lake Tohopekaliga, Florida
-
St. James Tidal Pool, Cape Town, South Africa
-
Bathing huts in Skåne County, Sweden
-
The birthplace of Cinco de Mayo
-
1934 Labor Day parade, Gastonia, North Carolina
-
Vermilion Cliffs National Monument
-
A Christmas market with a long history
-
Mountains fit for a queen
-
Nesting season for the leatherbacks
-
The Wall for Peace
-
Birthplace of Roman emperors
-
Summer’s in home stretch
-
Irohazaka road
-
Wild and beautiful Alaska
-
Fujian Tulou, China
-
The Hermitage of Santa Justa
-
Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah
-
A day of death and rebirth
-
Saskatchewan s spookier side
-
Isla del Pescado on the Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia
-
Astronomy Day
-
A Latino art exhibition in Denver
-
Vote!
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

