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| Antarctic Fur Seal
Unknown (see text)
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| Arcetocephalus gazella Peters, 1875 |
The Antarctic Fur Seal (Arcetocephalus gazella) is one of seven seals in the genus Arctocephalus. As its name suggests, the Antarctic Fur Seal is distributed in Antarctic waters. Around 95% of the world population breeds at South Georgia. It is named for the German naval vessel the SMS Gazelle which collected the first specimen from Kerguelen Island. The species is also known as the Kerguelen Fur Seal.
This fur seal has a short and broad snout compared with others in the family. Adult males are dark brown in colour. Females and juveniles tend to be grey with a lighter underside. Pups are black at birth.
Males are substantially larger (2m, 200kg) than females (1.35m, 40kg). Males live for about 15 years and females up to 25.
Antarctic Fur Seals appear to act alone when foraging and migrating. Males breed polygynously - a strong male may have more than a dozen female parts in a single season. Territries are established on breeding grounds in October to early November. Females gestate for just over a year - giving birth in November or December. Pups are weaned at about month old. Juveniles may then spend several years in the water before returning to begin their breeding cycle.
The usual food supply is krill.
The Antarctic Fur Seal breeds in summer on island's ranging from South Georgia at 70° W round to about 80° E ( Kerguelen Islands). Additionally there is a breeding ground at Macquarie Island, 165° E - south of New Zealand. All of these islands are between 45°S and 60° S. The animal's winter range is not known. During these long dark months, the seal spends is almost surely close to the Antarctic ice - spending virtually its time at sea.
Latest estimates suggest that 2,000,000 individuals breed at South Georgia and 15,000 at Heard Island. Other islands in Antarctic waters may have a few hundred to a thousand such seals.
The Antarctic Fur Seal was very heavily hunted in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries for its pelt by sealers from the United States and the United Kingdom. By the early twentieth century, the seal was regarded as commercially extinct, and perhaps completely extinct. In fact a small population continued to exist, breeding on Bird Island in South Georgia. This colony has expanded rapidly over the course of a century and now numbers 2,000,000 animals. The current populations on the other Antarctic islands are believed to be off-shoots of this one colony.
The species is still protected by the governments in whose waters it resides (Australia, South Africa) and by the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic SealsThe Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Seals is part of the Antarctic Treaty System. note abbreviated as Antarctic Seals opened for signature June 1 1972 entered into force March 11 1978 objective to promote and achieve the protection, scientifi in waters south of 60° S. The animal is also listed in Appendix 2 of CITES. However some governments with interests in the Antarctic, for instance, the United Kingdom, say that some of these protections should be lifted as the species is causing damage to vulnerable Antarctic plants.