A Quarter-Century Quest Ends in Discovery
In 2002, marine scientist David Harasti noticed a tuft of purple algae shifting inside a shadowy overhang off Papua New Guinea’s coast. His digital camera captured the second, revealing an eye fixed within the processed photograph and sparking a 25-year hunt for an unknown creature.
Harasti, now principal analysis scientist on the Port Stephens Fisheries Institute, recognized it as a brand new ghost pipefish species in contrast to any in his references. Not than a matchstick, the shaggy, weedy fish resembled Sesame Avenue’s elusive Mr. Snuffleupagus—a legendary, mammoth-like muppet as soon as dismissed as imaginary.
The Elusive Search Throughout the Indo-Pacific
Harasti returned to Papua New Guinea six instances and searched the Solomon Islands, however sightings remained sporadic. Reviews described the fish in orange, purple, or inexperienced, all the time fuzzy and camouflaged. For 20 years, it evaded seize, mixing scientific intrigue with legend.
“He was this uncommon, legendary creature that the people didn’t imagine in,” Harasti stated of Mr. Snuffleupagus, noting the fish’s comparable physique and mystique.
Syngnathid professional Graham Quick, who research pipefish, seahorses, and seadragons, joined the trouble, captivated by the resemblance.
Breakthrough on the Nice Barrier Reef
In 2020, mates alerted Harasti to sightings on the Nice Barrier Reef. With a specimen assortment license, he and Quick dove at Saxon Reef. After an preliminary miss, they discovered a female and male pair 15 meters deep in a coral nook amid purple filamentous algae.
“Graham and I had been hugging underwater. We had been high-fiving, so excited,” Harasti recalled. “That is one thing I’ve been trying to find 20 years. It’s the holy grail of the ghost pipefish world.”
Taxonomy and Naming
Harasti collected the specimens. Quick carried out CT scans, measured fins and snouts, and analyzed genetics to verify the brand new species. They named it the bushy ghost pipefish, Solenostomus snuffleupagus, within the Journal of Fish Biology.
“I all the time stated to Graham, if we are able to get these specimens, we’re going to call it after the Snuffleupagus from Sesame Avenue,” Harasti defined. Sesame Workshop accredited enthusiastically.
The fish options bushy filaments and an extended snout, mirroring the muppet. Stomachs contained tiny fish; it possible eats mysid shrimp and zooplankton too.
Conservation Implications
Its conservation standing stays unknown, however formal description aids safety efforts. Harasti believes it’s extra frequent than thought, neglected as a result of camouflage resembling algae.
Each scientists have found a number of new species—Harasti even has one named after him. “That is, for sure, our greatest accomplishment,” they state. Subsequent, they purpose to seem on Sesame Avenue.

