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Marine Mammals

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Marine Mammals photos: Florida FWC, NOAA Sirenians No rear limbs (except as embryos) Flattened tail, moves up/down Large, round body, blubber Strictly vegetarian ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marine Mammals


1
Marine Mammals
photos Florida FWC, NOAA
2
Reptiles, Birds, Mammals
  • Phylum Chordata
  • Subphylum Vertebrata
  • 3 Classes
  • Class Reptilia
  • Class Aves (birds)
  • Class Mammalia

3
Mammals
  • 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)

4
Marine Mammals
  • Mammals evolved 200 mya
  • Some from land reinvaded the oceans 50 mya
  • Breathe air
  • Adaptations for diving
  • Several orders

Carnivora
5
Sea Otters
  • Order Carnivora
  • Family Mustelidae
  • Second smallest marine mammal (up to 5 ft, 100
    lbs)

6
Sea 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
7
Sea 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
8
Sea 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
9
Sea Otters
  • Dexterous front feet
  • Use rocks as tools to open urchins, clams,
    mussels, abalone, crabs
  • Key part of kelp communities

photos USFWS
10
Sea 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
11
Sea 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/
12
Marine 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
13
Polar 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
14
Polar 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
15
Polar 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
16
Polar Bears
  • Currently a threatened species on endangered
    species list
  • Estimated 20-25,000 worldwide
  • Global warming ? shrinking ice

ACIA Report, 2004, p25
17
Polar 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
18
Pinnipeds
  • 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

19
Pinnipeds
  • 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

20
Seals vs. Sea Lions
21
Seals 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
22
Seals of Long Island
Seal walk - Cupsogue Beach
23
Seals of Long Island
Seal walk - Cupsogue Beach
24
Seals of Long Island
Riverhead Foundation seal release Ponquogue Beach
25
Seals 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
26
Arctic 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
27
Antarctic Seals
Weddell seals
NOAA
Crabeater seal
Leopard seal
http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/shackleton/surviving/
images/leopardseal.jpeg
28
Other Seals
NOAA
Hawaiian monk seal
Ribbon seal
Elephant seal largest Pinneped
http//www.virginia.edu/uvatoday/beringsea/images/
ribbon_seal_200x154.jpg
29
Sea 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
30
Sea Lions
Steller and California sea lions
photos NOAA, USFWS
31
Sea Lions
Pier 39, San Francisco
New York Aquarium
California sea lions
32
Walruses
  • 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
33
Manatees 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
34
Sirenians
  • 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
35
Sirenians
  • 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
36
Sirenians
  • 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
37
Sirenians
  • 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
38
Stellers Sea Cow
  • Largest sirenian (25 ft)
  • Discovered 1741, Bering Sea, Alaska
  • Extinct since 1768

http//www.50birds.com/extan/images/extstellerssea
cow13b.jpg
39
Dugongs vs. Manatees
http//media-2.web.britannica.com/eb-media/95/6739
5-004-C975D8AD.gif
40
Dugongs
  • 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
41
Manatees
  • 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
42
Manatee Surveys
http//www.learner.org/jnorth/images/graphics/mana
tee/aerial_Krispie.jpg
http//cars.er.usgs.gov/Manatees/manatees.html
43
Wayward 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
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