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  1. May 7, 2021 · It’s one of the first studies to closely examine seal flippers as biomechanical tools adapted for swimming, according to Hocking, and helps fill in some vast gaps left by a limited fossil record ...

    • Swimming
    • Diving
    • Respiration
    • Sleep
    • Thermoregulation
    Harbor seals swim with all four flippers: they move their hind flippers from side to side to propel themselves forward, and use their foreflippers to help them steer.
    Harbor seals can swim forward and upside-down. They rarely swim backward.
    Harbor seals can swim up to 19 kph (12 mph), but they generally cruise at slower speeds.
    Harbor seals can dive to depths exceeding 200 m (656 ft.). They don't routinely dive this deep, however, since most of their food is found in shallow waters.
    Adult harbor seals can stay submerged for up to 30 minutes, but dives usually last only about three minutes. A two-day-old harbor seal pup can stay submerged for up to two minutes.
    All marine mammals have special physiological adaptations for diving. These adaptations enable a harbor seal to conserve oxygen while it is under water.
    Before a deep dive, a harbor seal exhales to reduce the amount of air in its lungs. Oxygen is stored in the blood and muscle tissues, rather than in the lungs.

    Like most other marine mammals, a harbor seal's typical respiration cycle is a short exhalation, a short inhalation, and a longer breath-holding (apnea) period.

    Harbor seals sleep on land or in the water. In the water they sleep at the surface and often assume a posture known as bottling - their entire bodies remain submerged with just their heads exposed. This enables them to breathe when necessary.

    A harbor seal's core temperature is about 37.8°C (100°F). There is a heat gradient throughout the blubber from the body core to the skin. The skin remains about one degree Celsius warmer than surro...
    Harbor seals have a metabolic rate somewhat higher than land mammals of the same size. This helps them generate body heat for warmth.
    A thick layer of blubber insulates the harbor seal, reducing heat loss. The blubber of a northern Pacific harbor seal during winter may account for 27% to 30% of its total body mass. Blubber also s...
    In cold water, blood is shunted inward as blood vessels in the skin constrict, reducing heat loss to the environment.
  2. Feb 9, 2023 · Seals are mammals and, as such, belong to the Mammalian class along with over 6,000 other species. Within the class Mammalia, there are 26 different orders, of which seals fall into the order Carnivora, which also includes wolves, bears, hyenas, and dogs. Seals have their own sub-order, pinnipeds, but are divided into different families based ...

  3. www.fisheries.noaa.gov › feature-story › 14-seal-secrets14 Seal Secrets - NOAA Fisheries

    • They have been around for a long time. Fossil records indicate that the ancestors of modern seals first entered the ocean on the west coast, about 28–30 million years ago.
    • There are three different major types of pinnipeds. “Phocid seals” are also called “true seals” and include several species such as harbor seals and gray seals.
    • They have whiskers they use like cats do. Seals and sea lions have many well-developed whiskers, much like cats. Like cats, they have a very acute sense of touch.
    • They can go for long periods of time without eating. A seal’s body stores enough fat in the blubber layer to allow the animal to go for extended periods of time without eating.
  4. May 7, 2021 · Despite living in the same environment and doing largely the same things, seals have evolved two distinct ways to swim. One group of seals chiefly use their feet to propel them through the water, while the other uses their flippers to swim. This is curious, as both groups evolved from the same land-dwelling ancestor that slipped into the sea ...

  5. Aug 31, 2021 · Gray seals (Halichoerus grypus) are part of the phocid or true seal family. Interestingly, despite the name, their coats are not always completely gray in color! They are common along the rocky shores of New England, Canada, the UK, and Scandinavia. These seals spend quite a bit of time at rest on sandbars, rocky shorelines, islands, and ice ...

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  7. Seals are semi-aquatic because they are adapted to spend time on water and land. They are excellent swimmers and divers and have remarkable adaptations to the cold water. Seals can often be seen in haul-out spots resting their large bodies on land. Seals have a streamlined shape which they need to live in the water, deal with the cold, and swim ...

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