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steller sea lions

Trained Steller sea lions took part in a Canadian experiment designed to find out why the species is dying out.

The Canadian research team strapped cameras and tracking equipment onto endangered Steller sea lions to see how they dived for food.

Early results from the project indicate that overfishing might not be the main factor in their decline as had previously been thought.

Male Steller sea lions measure 3m (10ft) and weigh more than 950kg.

This makes them the biggest of all sea lions.

These marine mammals once thrived on the shores of the North Pacific Ocean. Now their numbers have dwindled to around 100,000. But no one knows why they are dying out.

To investigate why, Prof. Andrew Trites, a marine mammal specialist from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, has recruited some of them to help him with his experiments.

Trained Steller sea lions took part in a Canadian experiment designed to find out why the species is dying out

Trained Steller sea lions took part in a Canadian experiment designed to find out why the species is dying out

 

Sea lions are well known for their ability to learn tricks. But with the help of trainers from Vancouver Aquarium, Prof. Andrew Trites has trained four females to follow voice commands and hand gestures that enable them to take part in scientific experiments.

“The Steller sea lions are rare in the wild and even rarer in captivity,” explained Prof. Andrew Trites.

“In order to get into their heads you need access to them 24-hours-a-day and that’s what we have here.”

It’s the first time that sea lions have been used in this way. They have been trained for the project since they were pups 15 years ago. According to one of the trainers, Troy Neil, it has been a long, hard process.

“It’s not been easy. It’s taken a lot of time and patience. At times it feels I’ve been spending more time with them than my family,” he joked.

His equally dedicated colleague, Nigel Walker, agrees: “Sometimes I forget it’s not normal to hang out with 500lb seals.”

Then, to prove the point, one of the sea lions raises herself on her hindquarters, approaches Nigel Walker and plants a firm kiss on his lips.

These seals seem happy in their scientific work.

Once the seals are fitted with their sensors, they are taken out to open water on their own personal speed boat, the Steller Shuttle.

They speed into the breathtaking fjords of British Columbia, where the icy waters are more than a mile deep. It is the perfect place to study how these animals hunts for food.

The Steller Shuttle reaches its destination – a small research platform. One of the sea lions, Hazy, eagerly dives into the still waters and, as instructed, makes her way into an enclosure which serves as a kind of underwater laboratory.

On the platform, researchers push pieces of fish down a pipe that goes right to the bottom of the water. Then Hazy is told to dive deep into the water.

Her sensors measure precisely the amount of energy she uses as she speeds down to catch the fish.

Hazy is equipped with a camera so that the researchers witness the transformation from a playful seal to a speeding torpedo.

The research team has discovered that it is much harder for her to feed close to the surface – a possible clue to why her kind is dying out.

Another early result from these experiments, according to Prof. Andrew Trites, is that these mammals are suffering because they may be eating the wrong kind of food.

“It’s called the junk food hypothesis,” he said.

“These animals need oily fish such as herring, sand eels and salmon to thrive. But instead they are eating pollock and the animals are full before they get enough calories.”

For the first time, researchers are looking at the world through the eyes of Stellar sea lions to see if they can reverse the decline of these magnificent creatures.

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The Alaska Department of Fish and Game highlighted in a video the devastating effects of debris on sea lions and seals.

Horrific images show the marine animals with their necks tightly bound and cut with bands and fishing nets and others with fishing lures hanging from their mouths.

In one of the more gruesome images a dead sea lion can be seen pinned by her flippers in a windsock, which led to her drowning.

It is thought that many of the animals become trapped in plastic bands when they are young.

But as they get older and grow, the bands slowly cut into their bodies, which can lead to strangulation.

The Alaska Department of Fish and Game released the video to highlight the effects of fishing gear and other debris on the animals.

In one of the more gruesome images released by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game a dead sea lion can be seen pinned by her flippers in a windsock, which led to her drowning

In one of the more gruesome images released by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game a dead sea lion can be seen pinned by her flippers in a windsock, which led to her drowning

Authorities in Alaska – who say they are underestimating the numbers of animals injured – are now looking to work more closely with the fishing industry to prevent sea lions and seals becoming trapped in debris.

A study of eastern Steller sea lions, which are threatened by extinction, was carried out between 2000 and 2007 along the coast of Alaska and northern British Columbia.

The study revealed that 386 animals had picked up debris.

Plastic packing bands – used to secure boxes – and rubber bands were found to be the most common items which ended up around the necks of the animals.

Metal flasher lures, which are used when fishing for salmon, were the most frequent fishing gear ingested.

Lauri Jemison, a wildlife biologist in the Steller Sea Lion program of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, who took part in the study, told LiveScience:

“We are certainly underestimating the number of animals entangled.

“We go out every summer here in southeastern Alaska and we try to visit every haul out (where animals come to shore) and rookery (where they breed) at least once.”

Researchers say they could have missed counting some of the animals which didn’t come to shore or were not visible in a crowd of sea lions.

The horrific effects of sea debris also affect other marine wildlife, including sea birds and turtles.

As well as the Steller sea lions, northern fur seals also become regularly entangled.

Although the researchers found that they don’t swallow as much fishing gear as the Steller sea lion, they do get bands trapped around their necks.

The Alaska Department of Fish and Game is now looking for funding to work with the fishing industry to help prevent the sea lions and seals from becoming trapped in fishing equipment.

People are also being encouraged to cut loops which are thrown into rubbish bins.

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