True seals

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(Source: Marcel Burkhard (user Cele4) via Wikimedia Commons)

True seals (scientific name: Phocidae) are a family of nineteen species of marine mammals. Together with the families of Eared seals and Walruses, True seals form the group of marine mammals known as pinnipeds. Alternative names for this family are: Earless seals, Crawling seals and Phocid. seals. Collectively this family of seals is broadly distributed along the coastal waters and shorelines of the world's seas and oceans. They are carnivores, who prey chiefly upon fish and crustaceans.

Scientific Classification

Kingdom: Animalia (Animals)
Phylum:--- Chordata
Class:------Mammalia (Mammals)
Order:-------- Carnivora (Carnivores)
Family:-------- Phocidae (True Seals)

Family morphology

True seals differ from Eared seals in that they do not have external earflaps: hence the common name Earless seals. True seals also do not have the strong front flippers and flexible hind flippers which enable Eared seals to be quite moble on land, leading to the alternative common family name, Crawling seals

While True seals are less mobile on land, they more streamlined than Eared seals and very efficient swimmers, usually capable of covering large distances. The rear flippers propel the animal through the water while the front flippers provide balance and steer.

True seals vary considerably in size from the smallest, the Ringed seal are 1.1 to 1.7 meters in length, and 45 to 100 kilograms (kg) in weight. The largest, the male Southern elephant seal, has been documented to reach over six meters long and weighing over 4,000 kg. This is in sharp contrast to the female Southern elephant seal which seldomly exceeds 800 kg or four meters in length.

Taxonomy

True seals break down into thirteen genera:

180px-Hooded Seal 1.jpg Hooded seal. Source:Sea Mammal Research Unit (SMRU)/WoRMS/Encyclopedia of Life.
180px-Bearded Seal 2.jpg Bearded seal with satellite-linked data recorder attached to it for research purposes. Source: NOAA.
180px-Grey seal 1.jpg Grey seal. Source: Cynthia Sims Parr, Animal Diversity Web/Encyclopedia of Life
180px-Ribbon seal 1.jpg Ribbon seal. Source: M. Cameron/NOAA
180px-Leopard Seal 1.jpg Leopard seal. Source: Yan Ropert-Coudert/WoRMS/Encyclopedia of Life
180px-Weddell seal 1.jpg Weddell sea. Source: José Luis Orgeira/WoRMS/Encyclopedia of Life
180px-Crabeater seal 1.jpg Crabeater seal. Source: Mike Cameron/NOAA
180px-Northern elephant seal 1.jpg Northern elephant seal. Source: Fred Sorenson/BioLib/Encyclopedia of Life
180px-Southern elephant seal 1.jpg Southern elephant seal. Source: José Luis Orgeira/WoRMS/Encyclopedia of Life
180px-Mediterranean monk seal 1.jpg Mediterranean monk seal. Source: Giovanni Dall'Orto
180px-Hawaiian monk seal 1.jpg Hawaiian monk seals. Source: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
180px-Carribean monk seal 1.jpg Carribean monk seal.
180px-Ross-seal 1.jpg Ross seal. Source: NOAA
180px-Harp seal 1.jpg Harp seal.
180px-Spotted seal 1.jpg Spotted seal. Source:M. Cameron/NOAA
180px-Harbor seal 1.jpg Harbor seal. Source: Petr Baum/BioLib/Encyclopedia of Life
180px-Caspian Seal 1.jpg Caspian seal.
180px-Ringed seal 1.jpg Ringed seal.
180px-Baika seal 1.JPG Baikal seal.

True seals are found in many regions of the earth from the Arctic to the Antarctic and a frequently observed in coastal regions. The Hawaiian monk seal is noteworthy for its presence in tropical waters. Before it became extinct, the Caribbean Monk Seal was similarly noteworthy. The Caspian Seal is noteworthy for being endemic to an inland sea, though two subspecies of Ringed Seal, the Lagoda ringed seal and the Saimaa ringed seal have similar inland ranges.

There has been no confirmed sighting of a Caribbean monk seal since 1952, and the species is now considered extinct. The other two species of monk seal, the Mediterranean monk seal and the Hawaiian monk seal both have a conservation status of Critically Endangered and survive in low numbers in habitat that is highly impacted by human activity. The Caspian Seal is also considered an endangered species. The conservation status of the individual species within this family is as follows:


For details regarding individual species, consult the article on each individual seal.

Further Reading

  1. Encyclopedia of Life (accessed April 21,2009)
  2. WoRMS, World Registry of Marine Species (accessed March 21, 2009)
  3. IUCN Red List (accessed April 21, 2009)
  4. Seal Conservation Society (accessed April 21, 2009)
  5. Zalophus, MarineBio.org (accessed, April 8, 2009)
  6. The Pinnipeds: Seals, Sea Lions, and Walruses, Marianne Riedman, University of California Press, 1991 ISBN: 0520064984
  7. Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals, Bernd Wursig, Academic Press, 2002 ISBN: 0125513402
  8. Marine Mammal Research: Conservation beyond Crisis, edited by John E. Reynolds III, William F. Perrin, Randall R. Reeves, Suzanne Montgomery and Timothy J. Ragen, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005 ISBN: 0801882559
  9. Walker's Mammals of the World, Ronald M. Nowak, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999 ISBN: 0801857899

Citation

Life, E. (2014). True seals. Retrieved from http://editors.eol.org/eoearth/wiki/true_seals