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Harbor Seal Pupping Season Leads To Access Restrictions At Point Reyes National Seashore

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With harbor seals descending on Point Reyes National Seashore on the California coast for pupping season, restrictions on public access to various parts of the seashore take effect Thursday and run through the end of June.

Seashore officials say Point Reyes "has the largest mainland breeding concentration of harbor seals in California. Resting and pupping harbor seals come onshore in various parts of the park particularly in Tomales Bay, Tomales Point, Double Point, Drakes Estero, and Bolinas Lagoon. Each year, several thousand seals congregate within the Seashore especially to give birth on the sand bars and remote beaches."

During the pupping season, areas of the Seashore are closed to kayakers and canoeists, as well as "surfers, windsurfers, abalone divers, recreational fishing, and other water sport users around harbor seal colonies in the area."

Last year, almost 4,000 harbor seals were counted, 1,302 of which were pups. The number of seals breeding at Point Reyes represents around 20 percent of the California mainland population estimate. The Seashore staff is conducting long-term monitoring to gain further scientific knowledge on this species and to guide management in their protection.

The east side of Hog Island in Tomales Bay is also a terrestrial resting site for harbor seals and seabirds year round. Harbor seals haul out on the sand bar at Hog Island throughout the year but are most abundant during the winter months when their preferred prey, Pacific herring, spawns in Tomales Bay. During the spring months, females with pups may also haul out there.

To ensure that harbor seals are not disturbed, visitors are asked to stay at least 100 yards (300 feet) away from resting seals. Visitors should never pick up a seal that may look abandoned. Although harbor seals may appear abandoned, they are most likely waiting for their mother to return. Pups are about two feet long and weigh about 24 pounds and are weaned 30 days after birth. If you are concerned about a particular seal, please contact park staff at one of the Visitor Centers.

A few species of seabirds roost on Hog Island including brown pelicans and double-crested cormorants, which occur in Tomales Bay during the summer and fall months of the year. They forage on various species of small schooling fish that congregate in Tomales Bay, and cormorants nest on the island in the spring and summer.

Harbor seals are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 and therefore, it is unlawful to disturb them while they are resting onshore.

Comments

I've heard of well meaning people who have come across harbor seal pups, seeing no mother around, and thinking they were abandoned.

One group did something incredibly stupid. They thought they would be helpful by taking one to the Marine Mammal Center in Marin. They perceived it was cold and wrapped it up in a sleeping bag for the trip. The seal was perfectly healthy with a physiology (tolerance for cold and a layer of insulating fat) that's equipped for cold conditions. By doing so, the seal pup overheated and it suffered irreversable brain damage as a result.


Here's a word on the incident I mentioned:

http://www.marinemammalcenter.org/what-we-do/rehabilitation-release/what...

4. What does the Center do with animals that cannot be released?

Although the Center's ultimate goal is to release animals back to the wild, occasionally we will have an animal that is non-releasable. Animals that we have designated as non-releasable have included a sea lion with epilepsy, a northern fur seal that was hit by a car after coming ashore in Berkeley, and a harbor seal pup that suffered brain damage after being illegally picked up from a beach by unauthorized people who allowed him to get overheated.

  

http://pacificashorebird.org/distressed__spills

Never pick up a stranded or sick marine mammal, especially a seal pup. Many people who thought they were doing the right thing in picking up an apparently abandoned pup actually harmed or killed a healthy animal. Marine mammals need the temperatures we consider freezing cold. People who have picked up pups and tried to keep them warm actually caused a healthy pup to overheat, causing brain damage and even death. Another problem caused by this is when mothers are at sea feeding, and picking up a pup separates it from it's mother.

 


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