Title: Marine Mammals
1Marine Mammals
photos Florida FWC, NOAA
2Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
- Phylum Chordata
- Subphylum Vertebrata
- 3 Classes
- Class Reptilia
- Class Aves (birds)
- Class Mammalia
3Mammals
- Advantages over reptiles
- Endotherms, homeotherms (retain generated body
heat and regulate it to a constant temp.) - Skin covered with hair
- Layer of body fat
- Viviparous, placenta, mammary glands
- Large brain (relative to body size)
4Marine Mammals
- Mammals evolved 200 mya
- Some from land reinvaded the oceans 50 mya
- Breathe air
- Adaptations for diving
- Several orders
Carnivora
5Sea Otters
- Order Carnivora
- Family Mustelidae
- Second smallest marine mammal (up to 5 ft, 100
lbs)
6Sea Otters
- No blubber, traps air in thick fur for
insulation - Hunted near extinction for fur til 1911
- Still treatened
http//www.turtletrack.org/Issues01/Co10202001/Art
/SeaOtterFace.jpg
7Sea Otters
- Other threats
- Oil spills
- Predators killer whales, sharks, eagles
http//www.adn.com/evos/photos/evos29l.jpg
http//www.whale-images.com/data/media/2/whale-gam
es_155.jpg
8Sea Otters
- Webbed hind feet
- Dive up to 300 ft, 5 min
- Average dive 65 ft, 1.5 min
USGS
http//www.otterproject.org/atf/cf/7B1032ABCB-19F
9-4CB6-8364-2F74F73B30137D/Otter_image4.jpg
9Sea Otters
- Dexterous front feet
- Use rocks as tools to open urchins, clams,
mussels, abalone, crabs - Key part of kelp communities
photos USFWS
10Sea Otters
- When otter populations decline, urchins increase
- Urchins overgraze, cut through holdfasts, stipes
- Kelp sent adrift, strand on beach
- Bottom left barren
http//sbc.lternet.edu/sites/biome_kelpforest.html
11Sea Otters
- Reproduction
- Breed every 1-2 yrs
- 1 pup born (3-5 lbs)
- Nurse for many months
http//www.flickr.com/photos/72825507_at_N00/43192298
2/
http//www.flickr.com/photos/mikebaird/2979351573/
in/photostream/
12Marine Otters
- Same subfamily as sea otters
- Smallest marine mammal
- (up to 3 ft, 10 lbs)
- Pacific coast of S. America
http//www.lioncrusher.com/images/range_maps/lontr
a_felina_range.gif
http//www.arkive.org/media/67/67547072-B9B4-494B-
A46E-7462CC40C79B/Presentation.Large/photo.jpg
http//www.arkive.org/media/94/94C38F72-9307-4411-
B90B-3D3D6FDFB08B/Presentation.Large/photo.jpg
13Polar Bears
- Order Carnivora, Family Ursidae
- Spend time on floating sea ice
- Thick blubber and fur to retain heat
- Eat mostly seals
- Top carnivore in Arctic food chain
AP
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thum
b/e/ec/Polar_Bear_2004-11-15.jpg/792px-Polar_Bear_
2004-11-15.jpg
14Polar Bears
AP
http//www.asknature.org/images/uploads/strategy/5
3ad434e8f86efc6d3285e60ee02ff3a/73626013f7ce3aa65b
f93bd58faf58f1.jpg
http//www.marinebio.net/marinescience/04benthon/a
rcimg/pb4054.jpg
http//www.marinebio.net/marinescience/04benthon/a
rcimg/pb6562.jpg
15Polar Bears
- Pregnant females dormant in maternity den until
spring - Usually 1-2 cubs, nurse for 2.5 yrs
- Breed every 2-3 yrs
photos USFWS
16Polar Bears
- Currently a threatened species on endangered
species list - Estimated 20-25,000 worldwide
- Global warming ? shrinking ice
ACIA Report, 2004, p25
17Polar Bears
- Excellent swimmers
- At risk of starvation and drowning from travel
between distant ice packs
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FilePolar_bear_
arctic.JPG
http//www.seaworld.org/infobooks/PolarBears/image
s/underwater3.gif
http//media.aftenposten.no/archive/00627/Polar_me
ltdown_13_A_627162f.jpg
18Pinnipeds
- Order Carnivora (formerly Pinnipedia)
- True seals (Phocidae) 18 species
- Eared seals (Otariidae)
- Sea lions 6 species
- Fur seals 9 species
- Walruses (Odobenidae) 1 species
- Most closely related to bears
19Pinnipeds
- Streamlined bodies, paddle-shaped flippers for
swimming - Predators - eat mostly fish, squid
- Elephant seals dive to 1500m, stay underwater
up to 2 hours - Mostly cold water, thick layer of blubber
- Rest and breed on land
20Seals vs. Sea Lions
21Seals of Long Island
Harbor seal (Phoca vitulina)
Grey seal (Halichoerus grypus)
- Males 5.5 ft, 250 lbs
- Females a little smaller
- North Atlantic
- Pacific
- Males 8 ft, 800 lbs
- Females 7 ft, 400 lbs
- North Atlantic (both sides)
http//web.anglia.ac.uk/appsci//lifesci/field_cour
ses/images/female_grey_seal_2002.jpg
22Seals of Long Island
Seal walk - Cupsogue Beach
23Seals of Long Island
Seal walk - Cupsogue Beach
24Seals of Long Island
Riverhead Foundation seal release Ponquogue Beach
25Seals of Long Island
http//www.cresli.org/cresli/images/sealmap2.jpg
http//www.newsday.com/other/special/naturalworld/
ny-nw-g1seal0111,0,6196352.graphic
http//www.cresli.org/cresli/images/Seals2000/Apri
l005.jpg
26Arctic Seals
Harp seals (Pagophilus groenlandicus)
Hooded seal (Cystophora cristata)
Spotted seal
Ringed seal (Phoca hispida)
http//www.kamogawa-seaworld.jp/graph/06/07/img/im
g_06_1.jpg
http//www.ifaw.org/ifaw/dimages/image_5142.jpg
27Antarctic Seals
Weddell seals
NOAA
Crabeater seal
Leopard seal
http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/shackleton/surviving/
images/leopardseal.jpeg
28Other Seals
NOAA
Hawaiian monk seal
Ribbon seal
Elephant seal largest Pinneped
http//www.virginia.edu/uvatoday/beringsea/images/
ribbon_seal_200x154.jpg
29Sea Lions and Fur Seals
- Differ from true seals anatomically and
geographically - True seals more widespread, many oceans
- Eared seals mostly Pacific
- Fur seals smaller
- than sea lions
NOAA
Fur seals
30Sea Lions
Steller and California sea lions
photos NOAA, USFWS
31Sea Lions
Pier 39, San Francisco
New York Aquarium
California sea lions
32Walruses
- One species, only in Arctic
- Distinctive tusks, for defense and to grab hold
of ice - Eats bottom invertebrates (clams)
- Stiff whiskers as feelers
photos NOAA, USFWS
33Manatees and Dugongs
- Order Sirenia (sea cows)
- Manatees (3 species)
- Dugongs (1 species)
- Stellers Sea Cow
- Entirely aquatic life
- Most closely
- related to elephants
http//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/FileTrichechus_
manatus_fg01.JPG
34Sirenians
- No rear limbs (except as embryos)
- Flattened tail, moves up/down
- Large, round body, blubber
- Strictly vegetarian (seagrass, aquatic plants)
http//asterix.ednet.lsu.edu/edtech/rainfor/manat
ee/manat2.jpg
http//www.citycliks.com/graphics/32_02.jpg
35Sirenians
- Slow reproduction
- (1 calf every few years)
- Mammary glands
- under armpits
Florida FWC
Florida FWC
http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0e
/Dugong_mother_offspring.jpg
36Sirenians
- All species endangered or extinct
- Hunted for meat, skin, blubber
- Hit by boaters (swim slow, near surface)
Florida FWC
http//farm4.static.flickr.com/3242/3150118129_172
b5efe3f.jpg?v0
Robert Rattner _at_ http//www.savethemanatee.org/man
ateeprop.jpg
37Sirenians
- Entangled in nets, lines
- Losing habitat (destruction of seagrass beds)
- Approx. 5000 manatees around Florida
- 2013 record mortality 829 (16 of population)
due to - red tide, unk. disease
- Normal mortality
- 300-450/year
http//4.bp.blogspot.com/_4o4dTnXsGkw/TH5sOaTmNqI/
AAAAAAAAAWE/nraq5tR6AUY/s1600/DRC-Manatee-GalwayBa
y.JPG
38Stellers Sea Cow
- Largest sirenian (25 ft)
- Discovered 1741, Bering Sea, Alaska
- Extinct since 1768
http//www.50birds.com/extan/images/extstellerssea
cow13b.jpg
39Dugongs vs. Manatees
http//media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/95/6739
5-004-C975D8AD.gif
40Dugongs
- Red Sea, Indian Ocean to Western Pacific,
especially around Australia - Strictly marine
http//www.wildworldweb.co.uk/holidays/RedSea3/Dug
ong20P1010173-01.jpg
http//www.greenpeace.org/raw/image_full/internati
onal/photosvideos/photos/a-gentle-dugong-near-okin
awa.jpg
41Manatees
- Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, Amazon River,
West Africa - Coastal bays, rivers, warm springs, and power
plant discharge canals (salt or freshwater)
Florida FWC
Florida FWC
http//www.nrca.org/yourenv/biodiversity/Species/g
ifs/manatee.jpg
42Manatee Surveys
http//www.learner.org/jnorth/images/graphics/mana
tee/aerial_Krispie.jpg
http//cars.er.usgs.gov/Manatees/manatees.html
43Wayward Manatees
- Sometimes migrate out of normal areas
- Chessie tagged by USGS, seen in NY, Rhode
Island 1995 Virginia 1996, 2001 - Hudson River, August 2006
- LIS, August 2010
- Mississippi River
- near Memphis, Tenn.
- (700 miles from Gulf),
- Fall 2006