When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Leopard seal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leopard_seal

    The skull of the leopard seal. The leopard seal has a distinctively long and muscular body shape when compared to other seals. The overall length of adults is 2.4–3.5 m (7.9–11.5 ft) and their weight is in the range 200 to 600 kilograms (440 to 1,320 lb), making them the same length as the northern walrus but usually less than half the weight.

  3. Seal meat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seal_meat

    Seal meat is the flesh, including the blubber and organs, of seals used as food for humans or other animals. It is prepared in numerous ways, often being hung and dried before consumption. It is prepared in numerous ways, often being hung and dried before consumption.

  4. List of pinnipeds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pinnipeds

    Diet: Lanternfish, as well as a narrow range of fish from the Scomberesocidae, Carangidae, Engraulidae, and Bathylagidae families, and cephalopods [12] LC 16,000 [12] New Zealand fur seal. A. forsteri (Lesson, 1828) Southern Australian and New Zealand coasts: Size: Male: 150–250 cm (59–98 in) long; 120–180 kg (265–397 lb)

  5. Lobodontini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobodontini

    All lobodontine seals have circumpolar distributions surrounding Antarctica. They include both the world's most abundant seal (the crabeater seal) and the only predominantly mammal-eating seal (the leopard seal). While the Weddell seal prefers the shore-fast ice, the other species live primarily on and around the off-shore pack ice. Thus ...

  6. Early seal gets the fish: Secret hunting habits of Weddell ...

    www.aol.com/early-seal-gets-fish-secret...

    The seals can live for as many as 30 years in the wild, while dealing with predators like orcas and larger leopard seals. They survive on fish, squid, and other smaller prey to survive.

  7. Freshwater seal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freshwater_seal

    The diet of these seals is primarily composed of Salmonids in the summer with the diet of these seals remaining obscure throughout the remainder of the year. [14] This population has been recorded at around 400 individuals, though following particularly harsh winters in the 1970s, the population is thought to have dropped to as low as only 50 ...

  8. Ribbon seal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribbon_seal

    The diet of ribbon seal consists almost exclusively of pelagic creatures: fish like pollocks, eelpouts, the Arctic cod, and cephalopods such as squid and octopus; young seals eat crustaceans as well. The ribbon seal dives to depths of up to 200 m in search of food; it is solitary and forms no herds.

  9. Portal:Animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Animals

    The leopard seal (Hydrurga leptonyx), also known as the sea leopard, is the second largest species of seal in the Antarctic, after the southern elephant seal. Its only natural predators are the killer whale and possibly the elephant seal. It feeds on a wide range of prey including cephalopods, other pinnipeds, krill, birds and fish.