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| Ecology and Behavior |
Northern elephant seals are highly polygynous, but not territorial. Males compete for access to females by ranking themselves in a hierarchy. There is much male-male fighting, vocalizing, and displaying during the breeding season, when bulls may be ashore for months at a time. One of the most impressive displays occurs when a male rears up on his hindquarters, thrusts one half to two-thirds of his body upward, and produces a distinctive clap threat vocalization as a challenge to other bulls. The sound is a rolling, resonant, metallic-sounding series of backfire like sounds punctuated with pauses (it has been described as sounding like someone farting in a trash can).
Females give birth within a few days of coming ashore, from late December to March, and wean their pups in 28 days on average. Females have a throaty sputtering growl, made with the mouth wide open and used as threat gesture. Females and pups have a warbling scream call that they use to call to each other, and in the case of the pup, when disturbed. Mother and pup form a strong bond immediately after birth, and females aggressively bite other pups that approach them, occasionally killing them with bites to the head. Bulls also cause pup mortality by crushing them as they charge through aggregations of mothers and pups to chase off or fight males approaching females or challenging their status. Occasionally, they suffocate pups by stopping on top of them and not moving again soon enough.
Great white sharks and killer whales are predators on northern elephant seals. Recent work at the Farallon Islands off of central California has revealed that large great white sharks aggregate around the islands in the fall when juvenile elephant seals return for their annual molt. Seals that swim at or near the surface as they are approaching or departing the islands are particularly vulnerable to ambush attacks by fast-rising sharks that patrol near the bottom in seven to ten meter deep waters.
Northern elephant seals hold the record as the deepest-diving pinniped. Time-depth recording devices have documented dives to an astounding 1580 m by an adult male. They also have extreme breath holding ability and have been recorded to dive for as long as 77 minutes. Rest intervals at the surface are usually short, lasting only several minutes between routine dives that last 20-30 minutes and reach 300 to 800 m in depth. After leaving the rookeries, most of these seals spend 80-90% of their time underwater, helping explain why they are infrequently seen at sea. |
| Feeding and Prey |
Fifty-three species of prey have been identified in the diet of northern elephant seals. More than half of these species are squid. Other prey includes various fishes, such as Pacific whiting, several species of rock fish, and a variety of small sharks and rays. They have also been reported to feed on pelagic red crabs. The habitat of 70% of their prey is open ocean and included species from surface, mid and deep water zones. |
| Threats and Status |
The northern elephant seal was hunted to the brink of extinction in a surge of commercial exploitation in the late 1800s. Much speculation exists on the numbers of animals that survived this population bottleneck. Some estimates are as low as 50 animals or less. Fortunately, for the species, their pelagic nature and the fact that most seals spend 80% or more of their lives at sea, and that they all do all not return to their rookeries at the same time, ensured that enough seals were at sea to support continuation of the species when sealers undertook wholesale slaughters at rookery sites. Following a slow recovery in the early 1900s, northern elephant seals began to recolonize former sites throughout the 1980s, and the population was estimated to have reached more than 120,000 by 1991. The current estimate of 150,000 suggests that the population is continuing to increase, although there has not been a recent range-wide survey to confirm this figure.
Northern elephant seals are fully protected on their Mexican and US rookeries, and incidental take in fisheries is low. Most of the prey of the northern elephant seal is either of low commercial value or minimally harvested in fisheries. If the population continues to expand there will likely be new rookeries on mainland beaches, and there will be additional challenges to keep conflicts with humans and domestic animals to a minimum. The risk of transfer of diseases, such as morbillibivirus from domestic animals to northern elephant seals, is unknown. |
| Links |
For current information on the conservation status of this species, please consult the following websites:
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| References |
DELONG, R. L., AND B. S. STEWART. 1991. Diving patterns of northern elephant seal bulls. Marine Mammal Science 7(4):369-384.
DEUTSCH, C. J., D. E. CROCKER, D. P. COSTA, AND B. J. LE BOEUF. 1994. Sex- and age-related variation in reproductive effort of northern elephant seals. Pp169-210 in B. J. Le Bouef, and R. M. Laws eds. Elephant seals, University of California Press.
HINDELL, M. A. 2002. Elephant seals Mirounga angustirostris and M. leonina. Pp. 370-373 in W. F. Perrin, B. Wursig, and J. G. M. Thiewissen, eds. Encyclopedia of marine mammals. Academic Press.
MCGINNIS, S. M., AND R. J. SCHUSTERMAN. 1981. Northern elephant seal-Mirounga angutirostris Gill, 1866. Pp. 329-349 in S. H. Ridgway and R. Harrison, eds. Handbook of marine mammals, Vol. 2: Seals. Academic Press.
STEWART, B. S., P. K. YOCHEM, H. R. HUBER, R. L. DELONG, R. L. JAMESON, W. J. SYDEMAN, S. G. ALLEN, AND B. J. LE BOEUF. 1994. History and present status of the northern elephant seal population. Pp 29-48 in B. J. Le Bouef, and R. M. Laws eds. Elephant seals, University of California Press.
STEWART, B. S., AND H. R. HUBER. 1993. Mirounga angustirostris. Mammalian Species No. 449: 1-10, 4 figures. American Society of Mammalogists.
STEWART, B. S., AND R. L. DELONG. 1995. Double migrations of the northern elephant seal, Mirounga angustirostris. Journal of Mammalogy 76(1):196-205. |
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