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Hawaiian
Monk Seal
/ Monachus schauinslandi / `Ilio holo I ka uaua (dog that runs in
rough water)
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An
adult monk seal is usually dark grey or brown with a light grey
or yellow belly. Adults can weigh anywhere from 396 to 595 pounds;
adult females are generally larger than males. Pups usually weigh
24 to 33 pounds at birth and weigh up to 132 to 198 pounds within
five to six weeks.
The monk seal's common name is derived from its folds of skin that
look like a monk's hood, and because it spends most of its time
alone or in very small groups. |
| Habitat
& Behavior:
Most Hawaiian Monk Seals live in the Northwestern
Hawaiian Islands - Kure Atoll, Midway Atoll, Pearl and Hermes
Reef, Lisianski Island, Laysan Island, French Frigate Shoals, Gardner
Pinnacles, Necker Island, and Nihoa Island. These atolls and islands
are very remote and are either uninhabited or have little impact
by humans, thus providing an ideal habitat for these easily disturbed
creatures.
The coral reefs found around these atolls and islands provide the
monk seal with its food supply: spiny lobsters, octopuses, eels,
and various reef fishes. Their enemies include humans, sharks, diseases,
attacks from their own species, and marine debris such as lost fishing
nets and plastic products.
Mothers stay with their pups from birth to about five or six weeks,
never leaving them unprotected to go feed. During this time, she
will lose as much as 300 pounds in weight. When she finally departs,
the pup is on its own to learn to catch food. |
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spend most of their time in the ocean but like to rest on sandy
beaches, and sometimes use beach vegetation as shelter from wind
and rain. Monk seals are expert swimmers and divers; one seal was
recorded diving into depths in the range of 66 and 96 fathoms (396
to 576 feet). The average monk seal dives 51.2 times per day. The
life span of the Hawaiian Monk Seal is from 25-30 years. |
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| Past
& Present:
Hawaiian Monk Seals were first recorded in 1825
at the Hawaiian archipelago's northernmost island, Kure Atoll. Scientist
estimate about 1,300 to 1,400 monk seals live in the Hawaiian islands
chain today. The species has declined at approximately 11% per year
since 1989 and is the most endangered U.S. marine mammal.
Factors which
threathen the persistence and recovery of monk seal populations
include disturbance by human activities, interactions with fisheries,
mobbing of females by males, and shark predation. Although not directly
responsible for monk seal mortality, human activities on beaches,
even at low levels, can cause monk seals to abandon haul-out areas.
Such disturbance is particularly disruptive to mother-pup pairs.
In the 1800s,
shipwrecked crews ate them in order to survive. By the early 1900s,
humans were developing commercial and military facilities in monk
seal habitat. Bottomfish, longline, and lobster fisheries have all
directly affected monk seals. Indirectly, fisheries may affect seals
through competition for prey or entanglement in fisheries debris,
such as lost or discarded net and line. Mobbing attacks on adult
and immature females may be limiting the recovery of the Laysan
and Lisianski populations. Attacks by adult males result in known
(minimum) deaths of up to 10 or 11 seals annually at Laysan alone,
which represents approximately four percent of this island's populations.
Monk seals have been found dead with apparent shark-inflicted wounds,
and sharks have been observed feeding on dead seals. |
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Conservation
Efforts:
The Hawaiian Monk Seal recovery efforts are overseen by the National
Marine Fisheries Service, in cooperation
with other government and private organizations and universities.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages many remote islands as
National Wildlife Refuges to protect their habitat. |
Research includes
monitoring monk seal reproduction, survival techniques, and behavior.
In the main Hawaiian islands, volunteer groups routinely remove marine
debris from the ocean and the beaches; in remote areas, the U.S.
Coast Guard and U.S.
Navy lend a helping hand.
The Hawaiian Monk
Seal was listed as an endangered species in 1976 under the Federal Endangered
Species Act. Critical habitat was designated in 1988 from beaches to a
depth of 20 fathoms (120 feet) around the northwestern Hawaiian islands.
Trivia quiz:
Hawaiian Monk Seals
[a] spend
most of its time basking on beaches.
[b] spend most of its time in the ocean
[c] all of the above
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