Celebrate Father’s Day with seven whimsical and weird animal dads

From tiny hamsters to giant salamanders, here are some of the most unusual examples of fatherhood across the animal kingdom

Yellow-banded pipefish.

The yellow-banded pipefish (Dunckerocampus pessuliferus) with eggs attached to its belly.

Poelzer Wolfgang/Alamy

The animal kingdom abounds with examples of fatherhood. In some cases, dads simply mate, handing over the actual care of young ones to the mothers. But in others, animal fathers are extremely involved—they build nests, gather food and may even gestate their young.

In birds, for instance, males and females of 80 percent of species parent their young, says Karen McDonald, the STEM education program coordinator at the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC). In frogs and toads that parent, males take the lead about half the time.

Being a hands-on dad can have evolutionary benefits: In cases where males are doing the brooding and incubating or watching over fertilized eggs, “a lot of that has to do with being sure he’s the dad,” McDonald says. “He’s the one who gets to fertilize and to make sure that those are his offspring.”


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In honor of Father’s Day, we compiled seven of the most whimsical and weird animal dads out there.

Male Djungarian hamsters act as “midwives”

Hamster on white background.

Phodopus campbelli.

Redmond O. Durrell/Alamy

Djungarian hamster dads are literally hands-on. The tiny hamster species, Phodopus campbelli, is found in Asia and features males that are known to serve as “midwives”: they use their paws to help pull their young from birthing mothers, journalist Elah Feder shared on Scientific American’s Science Quickly podcast last year.

“After the pups are born, the dad carries each one to a warm nest inside the burrow” and helps to keep the pups warm, Feder said.

Jacana bird fathers take their chicks under their wing

Bird on lily pad with legs sticking out from under its wing.

A male African jacana (Actophilornis africanus) carrying chicks under its wing.

Nature Picture Library/Alamy

Sometimes called “Jesus birds,” jacanas are known for their wide feet and ability to glide across lily pads. But these birds are also among nature’s most involved dads.

“They build a nest; they incubate the eggs; they transport the young under their wings,” McDonald says. This adaptation isn’t always as cute as it sounds—the jacana chicks’ feet stick out from the father’s wing rather unnervingly. Jacanas even have “little spurs” on their wings that the birds use to defend their chicks, McDonald adds.

Poison dart frogs go the extra (quarter) mile

Bright green and black frog.

A three-striped poison frog (Ameerega trivittata) carrying tadpoles on his back.

Bernard Golden/Alamy

Male poison dart frogs, like many other frogs, are known for transporting their offspring from land to water by carrying the tadpoles on their backs. But some poison dart frogs take things to a new level.

In 2019, as Scientific American reported at the time, researchers discovered that some poison frog dads may travel as far as 400 meters (or about a quarter of a mile) in an apparent search for ideal nursery grounds. That distance is about 10,000 times their body length.

Three-spined stickleback fish get crafty with their nests

Female fish in vegetation tunnel next to male fish.

A three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) male inducing female to spawn.

Oxford Scientific/Getty Images

This list wouldn’t be complete without the three-spined stickleback, a freshwater fish found across North America. Male sticklebacks shelter their offspring by building a “fun little tunnel" made out of plants, twigs and other material held together by a gluelike substance produced by the fish, McDonald says. After a female deposits her eggs into this tunnel, the male will fertilize them.

But dad duty doesn’t stop there. “He guards them and protects them and oxygenates the eggs in the little tunnel,” McDonald says. “Once the young hatch, if the fry go too far, he’ll actually pick them up in his mouth and put [them] back in the den,” she says.

Pipefish, like seahorses, gestate their young

Yellow-banded pipefish.

The yellow-banded pipefish (Dunckerocampus pessuliferus) with eggs attached to its belly.

Poelzer Wolfgang/Alamy

Seahorses are among the most famous dads in the animal kingdom. Male seahorses are known for carrying, feeding and hatching eggs directly from a pouch on their body. But seahorses’ lesser-known—and much flatter—relative, the pipefish, does the exact same thing, McDonald explains.

“They care for the young, just like seahorses, but nobody thinks of them,” McDonald says. “Everybody thinks of seahorses.”

Eastern hellbenders are excellent caretakers, until they get hungry

Giant salamander in water.

Eastern hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis alleganiensis).

Robert Hamilton/Alamy

North America’s largest salamander, the Eastern hellbender, can grow to about two feet in length. It’s typical for males in the subspecies to watch over the eggs. But according to recent research, some of those dads have resorted to eating their clutches, possibly in response to environmental stressors such as water pollution or vegetation loss, as Scientific American reported in 2023.

Darwin’s frog dads swallow their children—for safety

A green frog with tan underbelly.

A male green Darwin’s frog (Rhinoderma darwinii) with young in the vocal pouch.

Nature Picture Library/Alamy

Yes, we put two frogs on this list. But Darwin’s frog (Rhinoderma darwinii) is too good to leave out. After the male of this species fertilizes its eggs, he “swallows” them, McDonald explains, and “carries them around in his vocal sac” until they’re ready to be released as juveniles.

“I love nature,” McDonald says.

Jackie Flynn Mogensen is a breaking news reporter at Scientific American. Before joining SciAm, she was a science reporter at Mother Jones, where she received a National Academies Eric and Wendy Schmidt Award for Excellence in Science Communications in 2024. Mogensen holds a master’s degree in environmental communication and a bachelor’s degree in earth sciences from Stanford University. She is based in New York City.

More by Jackie Flynn Mogensen

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