Hear
about Stellers
(Real Audio 3.0)
Family
and species - The variety of sea
lions which live at Sea Lion Caves is commonly called the
Northern, or Steller, sea lion. This sea lion is named
after George Wilhelm Steller, an eminent German
naturalist who accompanied the Russian explorer Vitus
Bering in 1741 on his second Alaskan expedition. Steller
was the first qualified observer to study and classify
these animals.
The Steller sea lion is a member of the
Otariidae family, or eared seal. It is characterized by
an external ear which can be closed when entering water
and by hind feet or flippers that point forward. In
contrast, Phocidae, or true seal, has no external ears
and it's rear flippers point backward. Also belonging to
the Otariidae family is the California sea lion and the
Alaska fur seal.
The
Alaska fur seal (Callorhinus alascanus), is not found at
Sea Lion Caves. The California sea lion (Zalophus
californianus) is seen all along the Pacific Coast and is
generally found at Sea Lion Caves from late fall to early
spring. It readily adapts to captivity and is trained for
circus acts.
The
largest of the eared seal family and the principal tenant
of Sea Lion Caves is the Steller sea lion. This animal is
also considered non-migratory because there is no mass
movement to summer or winter grounds, although
individuals or small groups may travel hundreds of miles
in search of food. It is found from the central
California coast, north to the Bering Sea and back south
into northern Japanese waters. A recent U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Survey indicates a possible total population of
nearly 80,000 Steller sea lions. Most of these animals
live on the offshore islands and rocks of British
Columbia and Alaska. Some Stellers live along the
California coast and about one thousand reside in Oregon
Waters. The number of Steller sea lions in the Sea Lion
Caves area varies from season to season and from year to
year with the herd averaging about 200 animals.

Physical
Characteristics - Sea Lions are
mammals, or warm blooded animals which give birth, nurse
their offspring, and must breathe air. Sea Lions are also
pinnipeds -- literally, feather-footed -- meaning they
have finlike members for propulsion. Their pelvic bone
structure allows independent use of their flippers, and
therefore, they can walk on their four weblike flippers
which contain the same bony structure as the legs of land
animals. In the water, the Steller sea lion swims by
using a breast stroke and may reach a top speed of about
17 m.p.h. In contrast, other marine animals, such as the
whale, depend on fishlike body action to move through the
water. The true fur seal folds its front flippers and
swims by the force of its trailing rear flippers.
Young sea
lions called pups seem to be immune to most diseases as
long as they are breast fed. As they mature, pups become
susceptible to internal parasites such as round worms and
tape worms which are a deterrent to both growth and
longevity. Population increases are also somewhat checked
by adult sea lions inadvertently trampling their young
and also by accidental drownings of the newly born which
have not yet learned to swim.
Diet
- Sea
lions are carnivorous. Their skulls are similar to those
of bears and their jaws contain sharp teeth much like
those found in dogs, cats, and other flesh eaters. They
feed exclusively on fish they catch themselves; their
diet varying with whatever is abundant in the area. In
the vicinity of Sea Lion Caves, they appear to subsist
chiefly on bottom fish such as skate, small sharks, squid
and various species of rock fish. Sea lions may descend
in search of food to a depth of 80 to 100 fathoms, and
normally remain submerged no longer then four or five
minutes.
Possible
sea lion predation on commercially valuable fish has been
of some concern. Because of the animal's remote and
rugged habitat, and because collecting specimens at sea
is difficult, much is unknown about its diet habits.
However, recent scientific studies indicate that valuable
fish such as salmon constitute a very minute part of the
sea lion diet. Although sea lions are good swimmers, they
find it much easier to capture more sluggish victims than
game fish.
If
provoked, the Steller sea lion would not deliberately
attack a human; however, a descent by man into the midst
of a harem during the mating season would be foolish.
Precautions are taken at Sea Lion Caves to prevent this
from happening.
Size, Growth & Color - Sea lions pups are
about four feet long at birth and weigh from 40 to 50
pounds. They are slate gray in color for about six
months, turn dark brown until approximately two years of
age, and they begin to assume the lighter tan color of
the adult. They remain with their mothers well over a
year and grow rapidly, averaging about six feet long at
the end of their first year. The pups continue to grow,
perhaps all of their lives, but the growth rate decreases
each year. Mature cows are identifiable by their size and
long slender shape. They average about eight or nine feet
in length and weigh from six to seven hundred pounds. The
bulls are much larger and have massive shoulders. They
average twelve feet in length and weigh around 1500
pounds. Many extremely large bulls have been known to
weigh well over a ton. The average life span of these
animals is believed to be about 20 years.

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Steller Sea
Lions
(Eumetopias jubatus)

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Listen to them here
(Real Audio
3.0)
Member of the
Otariidae family or eared seal
Population:
80,000
Lifespan: 20
years
Average herd
of 200 animals living in the Sea Lion Caves
region
-this number
varies from season to season and from year to
year.
Warm Blooded
Mammals
Sea Lions are
pinnipeds
- literally,
feather-footed - meaning they have finlike
members for propulsion.
Top
Speed: 17 mph
Diet:
- Sea Lions
are carnivorous
- Bottom fish such as skate, small sharks, squid
and various species of rock fish.
Family
Life - Sea lions breed and
bear young in the spring, usually in May and June,
although some breeding occurs as late as July or even
August. The coincidence of breeding and bearing was once
thought possible because female sea lions have a twin
uterus, a characteristic of all pinnipeds. Also, it was
assumed that the Steller sea lion bore a pup each year
like its close relative the Alaska fur seal.
However,
through close observation, it has been concluded that the
females generally bear every other year, as half-grown
pups have been seen nursing at their mother retractable
dugs well past bearing time. This variation from the
Otariidae family pattern may well have developed to give
the young sea lions a better diet and thus a better
chance of survival.
Gestation
has been timed at nine months. There is apparently some
system of delayed impregnation which makes bearing time
conform to the mating season. Cows that lose their pups
soon after birth probably breed again immediately and
bear the following season.
During
the breeding season, the bulls fight for territories on
the rocky ledges just outside the cave. Only the largest
and strongest bulls maintain harems of fifteen to thirty
cows. The remainder are called bachelor bulls and are
driven away to live elsewhere during this period. From
April until about mid-July, the family structure is
plainly evident with the young born on the rocky ledges
outside the cave. It is very rare for a cow to give birth
inside the grotto.

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image to enlarge
Until late in
July when the harem structure dissolves, the herd bulls
keep constant vigil over their females. Occasionally a
young, strong bachelor succeeds in besting an older bull
thereby acquiring the herd. The herd bulls do not leave
their harems even for food for perhaps three months. Only
the largest ocean waves can drive them from the ledge
into the sea. Females display no loyalty and when a harem
is broken by a storm, the bull may never recover all of
his chosen mates. Therefore, much of his work involves
keeping his "wives" from slipping away in
search of food or because of high waves and rough ocean.
Naturally, the bulls have lost weight and are exhausted
by the end of the breeding season and they generally
spend the remainder of the summer by themselves, resting
and regaining their strength.
Commercial
Value - The Steller sea
lion has no fur, but instead is covered with a course,
short hair about one inch long on its body, and the
mature bull has slightly longer hair resembling a mane
around his neck. Therefore, the Steller is of no
commercial value except that some natives in remote
northern parts of Alaska occasionally take the animal for
food or for the skin which is used in boat making.
An
Interesting Enigma - For some reason,
experts have found that the stomachs of many adult sea
lions contain stones! These stones very in number and
size from pebbles to three inches in diameter. No one
knows whether the stones serve some useful function to
the sea lion or whether they might have been swallowed
accidentally, possibly in play.
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