8.75" Plate of Fossil Pipefish (Syngnathus) - California

This is a 8.75" wide plate of chert containing two partial, crisscrossing pipefish of the extinct species, Syngnathus avus. The detailed preservation and light-orange color of the fossils contrast nicely against the creme colored rock. The head of a third pipefish (Hipposyngnathus imporcitor) can be found along one side of the chert.

Comes with an acrylic display stand.

These pipefish (pipe-fishes) come from a new deposit within the Monterey Formation located in Santa Barbara, California, discovered in May of 2016. Pipefish fossils are quite scarce: less than a handful of sites are known to produce these elusive fossils. A unique aspect of the pipefish fossils from this location is the prevalence of infants found alongside adult males, bringing to question whether the fish were brooding and expelled upon being buried, or if this site was a pipefish nursery. As more of this material is excavated, there is hope that some of these questions will be answered.

Pipefish are straight-bodied, extant relatives of seahorses. They have long tube-like snouts that end in small, narrow, and toothless mouths. Their bodies are long and snake-like, with a single dorsal fin that, in some species, is the only organ present for mobility. Because of this, many are weak swimmers in open water, moving primarily by rapidly waving the dorsal fin and, in most cases, using whatever form of caudal fin is present on the species. They generally inhabit sheltered areas in coral reefs or seagrass beds.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Syngnathus avus & Hipposyngnathus imporcitor
LOCATION
Santa Barbara County, California
FORMATION
Monterey Formation
SIZE
Longest Pipefish: 5.3" wide (straightline), Chert: 8.75 x 5.9"
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#274982
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