Adult bulls throw their weight around
https://www.sanluisobispo.com/news/local/environment/article276817486.html
The full-grown elephant seal bulls are returning to
Piedras Blancas for their summer break from foraging in the ocean. As one bull
arrived on the beach, he cleared females, juveniles, and one subadult bull from
his path as soon as he arrived.
This
video, posted to the Friends of the Elephant Seal YouTube channel, Look who's here for the
summer molt at Piedras Blancas! - YouTube, is edited from
his first ten minutes on the beach
by
Kathy Curtis, president of the FES board. If it seems like he is taking a long
time to
secure his place on the beach, remember he hasn’t used his land muscles for three months or more, and now weighs several hundred pounds more than when last on land.
Dominance helps bulls settle their status without
having to fight. Summer is a good time for visitors to observe these senior
bulls at rest.
Molting
This bull is one of the first to arrive for a few
weeks on the beach, to molt his skin. Some adult females and juveniles linger
on the beach, completing their molt. They will leave on their next migration,
leaving the beach to the bigger bulls for the summer.
Elephant seals molt their skin annually. The old brown
and tan skin peels off in chunks, revealing the new skin underneath. New hairs
are just beginning to grow, so the skin is gray. As the hair grows, the color
becomes brown.
The upper layer of skin is new, but old scars remain.
Look for the skin to begin peeling off around the eyes and old scars.
FES docents have samples of the bristly molted skin.
Ask to see and touch it. Some describe it as feeling like Astroturf. Elephant
seals don’t have the lush fur of some other seals and otters. Elephant seals
rely on their blubber, not their fur, for warmth.
Female migration
Adult females leave to go on their long migration of
the year. They’ll spend the next seven months feeding at sea. They are pregnant
with the next generation.
The embryo conceived after they weaned their pups last
winter has been suspended since then. Now, after they finish molting, it begins
developing. They will return in winter to give birth.
Juvenile migration
Juveniles leave the beach for a shorter migration,
returning in the fall for their annual Haul-Out.
Juvenile migrations are less studied than adults, so
Heather Liwanag, and her Team Ellie at the Vertebrate Integrative Physiology
(VIP) Lab at Cal Poly have been tagging weaned pups and tracking them on their
first migration to see where they go.
They knew to head north. Some ventured much further than others. Check out the maps showing their routes at Satellite Tags 2023 — VIP Lab (calpoly-viplab.com) and Satellite Tags 2022 — VIP Lab (calpoly-viplab.com). Try out the zoom and measurement features of the map.
Light Station Open House
Piedras Blancas Light Station will be open free, July
5 and 19 and August 2 and 16, 10 am -2 pm. Hike in from the north parking lot
of elephant seal viewpoint Boucher Trail trailhead or from the Boucher Trail
trailhead a mile north of the lighthouse.
Observe
the elephant seals from several other vantage points along the trail.
For more information, check the website Hike
In Open House - Piedras Blancas Light Station or email PiedrasBlancasTours@gmail.com.
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