What Animals Eat Seals?

Seals are pinnipeds, which are semi-aquatic mammals with winged feet. There are 33 species of seals, which can be found in the Arctic and Antarctic regions as well as along the North Atlantic and Pacific coast lines. Seals are the primary source of food for land and aquatic animals such as sharks, whales, polar bears, Arctic wolves and humans.

Although seal animals do not possess any significant defenses against these predators, they have adapted behaviors such as aquatic agility and safety in numbers to protect themselves from becoming prey.

Seal Animal Classification

Almost all seals live in cool and/or cold waters off the coast of major land masses. This includes areas off the coast of Africa, the Arctic, Antarctica and more.

As previously stated, seals are pinnipeds, which are "fin-footed" animals that are semi-aquatic. However, not all pinnipeds are seals. This group also includes walruses and sea lions. Many people mix up seals and sea lions as they're closely related and look very similar. There is a difference between seal and sea lion animals, though.

First, "true" seals are also referred to as earless seals since they have an ear hole and no ear "flap" over it. Sea lions, on the other hand, have ears and are sometimes called eared seals since they do have an ear flap over their ear hole.

Seals also have fur covering their long claws while sea lions have skin covering their short claws. Lastly, sea lions are able to rotate their flippers to "walk" on land while seals cannot do this and are force to "scoot" on land with their bellies almost like a caterpillar.

Land Predators

In the Arctic region, polar bears and Arctic wolves are the natural predators of the seal. The seal is an important part of the of the diet for both species, due to the nutritious insulating layer of blubber seals have under their skin to help keep them warm in the cold climate. Antarctic seals have no natural predators on the land. As a result of the lack of natural predation, seals in the Antarctic have a significantly larger population than seals in the Arctic.

In self-defense, some seals can be able fighters. For example, the male elephant seal can weigh up to 5,000 pounds, making him a formidable foe against his predators.

Another defensive behavior seals have is living in large colonies, often containing 1,000 or more seals. Land predators are often discouraged by the large number of seals in a single colony, as it is more advantages to hunt a seal on its own, away from the group because it poses less risk to the predator.

Aquatic Predators

Aquatic predators such as large sharks like great white sharks and Orca whales (also called killer whales) are a significant threat to seals who spend up to 80 percent of their time in the water. Pups are the preferred prey of the aquatic predators, as they have just begun to venture out into the water and are not as highly skilled swimmers as their parents who are able to propel themselves quickly away from predators.

Breeding on land and staying in their large colonies helps to keep seal pups safe from aquatic predators.

Humans

According to the Antarctic Connection, seals were the first species of animal to be commercially harvested in the Antarctic.

Humans hunted seals almost to the point of extinction in the 19th and 20th centuries for their meat, oil and pelts. This resulted in the seal population of the Antarctic region being protected by the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Seals.

Cite This Article

MLA

Cooke, Corinne. "What Animals Eat Seals?" sciencing.com, https://www.sciencing.com/animals-eat-seals-6775626/. 22 November 2019.

APA

Cooke, Corinne. (2019, November 22). What Animals Eat Seals?. sciencing.com. Retrieved from https://www.sciencing.com/animals-eat-seals-6775626/

Chicago

Cooke, Corinne. What Animals Eat Seals? last modified March 24, 2022. https://www.sciencing.com/animals-eat-seals-6775626/

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