Seals and walruses belong to the same general
family. They are pinnipeds, the term used to
indicate an animal with webbed feet.Walruses are
distinguished from seals by their tusks, which in
mature males grow up to two feet long.
Walruses use their tusks to aid locomotion
when they are on land, as a means of defense
when they are physically threatened, and as shovels
to plow the ocean floor to turn up the mollusks
that constitute the major part of their diets. Walruses
have strong, bristly hairs around their muzzles
that are used to separate the meat of the mollusks
from the shells.
Seal are gregarious creatures. In captivity, it is
easy to train them. They bond quickly with humans.
In their natural state, they tend to cluster together
in groups, often with as many as a thousand
of them lying in close proximity to each other
on the seashore or on an ice floe.
Seal and Walrus Habitats
Seals are found on every continent, including Antarctica.
Although most of them prefer the cold waters
of the circumpolar regions, seals swim toward
warmer waters to mate, then return to more frigid
areas to give birth, often delivering their young on
ice floes. Monk seals are found as close to the
equator as the GalГЎpagos Islands.
Most seals live in salt water, although Saimaa
seals live in Finland's freshwater lakes. Many of
them were killed off by fishermen who claimed
that they were eating all the fish in the lakes. The
Finnish government intervened and made killing
the seals illegal in 1955, but it was not until serious
conservation efforts began in the 1980's that the
population began to rebound. It is also illegal to
use fishing nets in those parts of the lake where the
Saimaa seals live and breed, because more than
half of their offspring were getting tangled in nets
and drowning.
Although they are warm-blooded animals that
must have air to breathe, seals and walruses
spend most of their lives in the sea. They are essentially
aquatic. Their webbed feet and flippers provide
them with easier locomotion in the sea than
on land, where most of them move quite clumsily.
Seals and walruses are strictly carnivorous animals
whose diet consists almost exclusively of fish
and mollusks. They may ingest some seaweed,
but if they do so, it is by accident. These animals
can close off their nasal passages so that water
does not enter them when they submerged. They
can remain under water for up to thirty minutes
without having to return to the surface. Seals are
more streamlined than walruses. Walruses usually
are found in waters that are no deeper than
sixty feet, although they can dive to three hundred
feet. They explore the ocean bottom, using their
tusks to dig into the sand for the mollusks they
live on.
Physical Characteristics of Seals and Walruses
Most seals and walruses have substantial layers of
blubber, constituting almost half of the body
weight of most seals. When melted down, the
blubber of a mature male elephant seal can yield
ninety gallons of oil. Blubber serves as the chief
insulating material in the cold waters where
most seals and walruses swim. The blubber also
provides buoyancy.Walruses can puff up blubberrich
areas in their necks to keep their heads
above water when they are bobbing about in the
ocean.
There are two families of seals, the true or
earless seals, family Phocidae, and the eared seals,
family Otariidae. The largest species of seal is the
elephant seal. It is sometimes twenty feet long and
can weigh as much as four tons. Even the smallest
species of seal, the ringed seal, is quite large,
weighing in at about two hundred pounds. At maturity
it is about five feet long. In some species, notably
the monk, Weddell, leopard, and crabeater
seals, the male is smaller than the female. Among
Phocidae seals, the male and female are of about
equal size, but among the Otariidae, the male is
larger than the female.
Seals communicate at various volumes. The
northern elephant seal has such a loud call that it
can be heard a mile way. The Ross seal has a chirping
sound that can be mistaken for bird song. The
Weddell seal has a soft, gentle call.
Walruses, of the family Odobenidae, are distinguished
from seals by their two upper canine
teeth that grow into ivory tusks harder than those
of elephants. These sometimes reach lengths exceeding
two feet. Walruses have small heads and
no protruding ears. The eyes are small and deepset.
The body is small, but overdeveloped in the
neck area. Bulls are up to twelve feet long and five
feet wide. They often weigh a ton. The female is
two-thirds the size of the male.
Mating and Reproduction
Most seals swim south to spawn, while walruses
usually spawn in their northern water habitats.
Male seals and walruses have multiple spouses,
sometimes as many as forty at one time. The older,
seasoned animals stake out the most attractive territory
and attract females to it, creating substantial
harems within their own venues. Older males often
fight off younger males, who in the end must
settle for inferior pieces of land and fewer
spouses. Males mature at about five years of age
and often continue to mate until past twenty. Female walruses give birth to one baby eleven
months after they mate. Female seals have similar
gestation periods but sometimes deliver twins, although
more typically they deliver single offspring.
Walruses tend to mate again within a
month of the delivery of a cub; seals in some cases
mate every other year, although some deliver
cubs annually.
Although some seals are solitary in winter,
they gather at breeding time in rookeries on islands
or ice floes, but also sometimes along
stretches of beach. As few as a dozen seals may
gather in a rookery, but sometimes there are as
many as a million within a fifty-mile radius. The
males arrive at the rookeries first to stake out their
territory, the most favorable locations being directly
on the water. In the northern hemisphere,
females usually arrive in July.
Human Uses of Seals and Walruses
Seals and walruses are benevolent creatures that
seldom attack and that are accepting of humans.
They are trusting enough to be
vulnerable to those who engage in
mass slaughters of the animals for
their fur, their blubber, and, in the
case of walruses, for their ivory
tusks, from which scrimshaw is
made.
Inuit and other people of the
Arctic depend upon seals and walruses
as part of their survival strategy
in hostile environments. After
they kill an animal, they treat it
with reverence, sometimes making
a replica of it from one of its bones
or from a tooth or tusk. They wear
such amulets around their necks to
demonstrate their gratitude to the
dead animal. When these native
people slaughter an animal, they
waste no part of it. They eat the
meat, render the blubber into oil
with which they light their lamps
andwarmtheir dwellings, convert
the hides into clothing and tentlike
coverings, and use the tusks and
bones to carve into scrimshaw.
When Europeans and Americans
began to raid the seal and
walrus populations, they did so indiscriminatelyandcameclose
to annihilating
these animals completely.
Fortunately, governments stepped
in to protect the endangered species
and to end the brutal slaying
of newborn cubs for their fur. Those who quested after fur attacked seal cubs
only days old, beating them bloody with clubs,
stripping them of their fur, often while the cub
was still conscious, and leaving their stripped
bodies on the ice. People around the world were
outraged by pictures they saw of such predation
by humans upon defenseless seal cubs. They
eventually called for this brutality to stop. Multinational
agreements were drafted to protect these
animals. The results have been encouraging as
seal and walrus populations have finally begun to
increase.
Classification:
Kingdom: Animalia
Subkingdom: Bilateria
Phylum: Craniata
Class: Mammalia
Subclass: Theria
Order: Pinnipeda
Families: Otariidae (eared seals, including fur
seals and sea lions, seven genera, fourteen species);
Phocidae (true, earless, or hair seals, ten
genera, nineteen species); Odobenidae (walruses)
Geographical location: Seals, every continent;
walruses, polar and circumpolar regions in
the Northern Hemisphere
Habitat: Mostly water, but they give birth on land
or on ice floes
Gestational period: Earless seals, ten to eleven
months; eared seals, twelve months; walruses,
fifteen to sixteen months
Life span: For males, twelve to thirty years in the
wild; females may have a life span of only
eight to twelve years, although some live to
twenty or even thirty
Special anatomy: Strong hind flippers, strong
arms; webbed digits, five toes and fingers
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