Cassandra P and Carlos R Seals Cassandra P and Carlos R
Food Seals eat 10 pounds of fish per day. Seals eat mainly fish, shellfish and crustacean. Leopard seal eat penguins. Crabeater seal is known to eat krill, which are small shrimp, like animals. Seals are carnivorous mammals. Food
Kinds of seals and where they live Walrus seal is the only seal that lives in the Tundra. Monk seals live in Hawaii. There is a elephant seal, Ringed seal, Baikal seal, Harp seal, Hooded seal, Spotted seal, Crabeater seal, Leopard seal, Ross seal, Monk seal and Walrus seal. Harp seals live in the artic mostly by Greenland. Kinds of seals and where they live
The Harp seal predators are Polar bears, Orcas, Walruses and man. The Leopard seals predators are Great White sharks and Orcas only. The seals predators are theorca, large sharks, whales, or other larger seals. Seals are the favorite food of many predators. Predators
Largest seal The largest seal is the elephant seal They can dive at least 1,000 feet Seal can remain under water for 30 minutes before coming up to get air They spend longest period on land Largest seal
Smallest seal The smallest seal is a ringed seal It is rarely 5 meters in length Its pattern is dark spots surrounded by light gray rings Usually 50-70 kilograms Smallest seal
Babies Young seals are called pups. Baby seals are about two feet long. Baby seals are known to be extreimly violent Baby seals milk is 50% fat Babies
Living They can live in the wild for 20-45 years They also live in captivity Both places however have diseases that kill large numbers of them There natural habitat is not threatened Living
Behavior They are sensitive animals They are really violent They are beyond intelligent All seals are mammals and they have the same pattern for feeding and breeding Behavior
Captivity They live well in captivity In captivity many seals end up with parasites, viruses and other illnesses that can kill them They have plenty water to swim in , land to rest on and food and water In captivity they will not eat or breed normally due to additional stress Captivity