All seals, all the time
The Piedras Blancas elephant seal beaches are full of seals in May. It’s the busiest time of the year. All the females who had pups during the breeding season are back, along with all the male and female seals who are not yet fully mature.
Of the full herd, only this year’s pups and the mature bulls are not on the beach. They are on their migration, feeding before they return later in the summer and fall.Feeding during the short migration
The females are looking good, fat from two months of
feeding in the open ocean. Recent research showed that these seals, who
departed in February thin from not eating during the breeding season, spend
almost all their time after they leave the beach feeding. They average less
than an hour and a half of sleep every day, diving constantly to devour enough
fish to gain the weight they need.
These female seals are the only large animals down
there, feeding on these fish. The males are simply too big to make a living on
small fish, so they stay closer to the coast and hunt bigger prey on the ocean
floor.
The downside is that it takes all day, every day, for
these half-ton seals to eat enough to make up for the weight they lost during
that month or more they spent on the beach, giving birth and nursing their
pups.
The research was based on the Ano Nuevo colony. The
research team includes Patrick Robinson, director of the Ano Nuevo Reserve, and
UC Santa Cruz assistant professor Roxanne Beltran, who will discuss their work
in the future at a public event in Cambria.
Molting
They return, with that sleek load of blubber, in May.
They molt their skin, which we can see. What we can’t see is that their bodies
are changing internally, preparing for the next pup to be born next winter.
This annual event gives them new skin to face the
coming year. You can see the difference between the old, brown skin and the
pearly gray new skin. As the hairs grow, their appearance will go back to
shades of brown.
Young seals
The young males and females on the beach loll in the
sun while their skin peels off. Young males spar, in the sand and in the water.
They bark their complaints about being shoved around in the crowd.
Look for young males with noses just starting to grow.
They are typically more active than their quiet mothers.