About
the Northern Fur Seal
The northern fur seal is an eared seal similar
to the sea lion. They have a thick waterproof underfur with over 350,000
hairs per square inch. Their fur appears gray or brown when dry, and
black when wet. Females and young males have a lighter colored throat,
while mature bulls develop a mane. A full grown male weighs 450 -
600 pounds. The females weigh 90 - 110 pounds. They can roll their
hind flippers forward and climb on rocks or run on land.
Each spring around 1.4 million fur seals, over 2/3 of the population
worldwide, come to the Pribilof Islands to give birth and breed. Large
males arrive in May and early June and aggressively establish their
territories. The pregnant females arrive in early to mid-June. They
give birth, mate, then nurse their pups for 3 - 4 months. The fur
seals leave the Pribilofs in November and December, then will stay
10 -100 miles from shore, rarely touching land again until the next
summer. The females and young males swim south to southeast Alaska
and as far as the California-Mexico border. Older males stay in the
southern Bering Sea and the Gulf of Alaska.
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