Fat greenling (Hexagrammos otakii) male in the background. The purple eggs in the middle, however, belong to an all-female hybrid species (Hexagrammos octogrammus x H. otakii) that produces all-female clones, using males of H. otakii to protect its eggs. There is no genetic benefit to the male. This is an example of hemiclonal reproduction. Hokkaido, Japan.
px | px | dpi | = | cm | x | cm | = | MB |
Details
Creative#:
TOP28919927
Source:
達志影像
Authorization Type:
RM
Release Information:
須由TPG 完整授權
Model Release:
no
Property Release:
no
Right to Privacy:
No
Same folder images:
Restriction:
NPL 不允許對其圖像或網站使用在AI的用途(數據挖掘、機器人或類似的數據收集或提取方法),除非事先明確書面同意
AnimalWildlifeVertebrateRay-finnedfishGreenlingAnimaliaAnimalWildlifeVertebrateActinopterygiiRay-finnedfishOsteichthyesBonyfishFishScorpaeniformesHexagrammidaeGreenlingHexagrammosHexagrammosotakiiReproducingReproduceReproductionAsiaEastAsiaJapanHokkaidoFemaleanimalAnimalEggsEggEggsOceanPacificOceanMarineWaterSaltwaterBiodiversityhotspotHybridHybridisationInterestingcatalogue16
ActinopterygiiAnimalAnimalAnimalAnimaliaAsiaAsiaBiodiversityBonyEastEggEggsEggsFemaleFishGreenlingGreenlingHexagrammidaeHexagrammosHexagrammosHokkaidoHybridHybridisationInterestingJapanMarineOceanOceanOsteichthyesPacificRay-finnedRay-finnedReproduceReproducingReproductionSaltwaterScorpaeniformesVertebrateVertebrateWaterWildlifeWildlifeanimalcatalogue16fishfishfishhotspototakii