Seal Reproduction
Seal Breeding and Reproduction
Researchers have been able to observe
seals in their natural environments to fully understand the
reproduction process. As breeding season emerges, the males
will start to turn on each other. The tension and the
aggression that they display are their way of being the one
that the females of interest will turn to. There is evidence to
suggest the males are producing more hormones during this
period of time which the females are attracted to.
The females will develop an egg that is protected in the
uterus by fluids. She too will produce more of her hormones and
as a result she is going to take an interest in the males that
are around her. The dominant of the males are the ones that
will get the right to breed with the females. The males don’t
even eat during this period of time because they don’t want to
risk other males trying to breed with a female they are
interested in.
The males don’t mate with only one female though. Instead,
they will mate with as many of them as they possibly can. It
can take up to nine months for the pup to be fully developed
and then born. When the pup is about to be born the female will
make her way back to the breeding grounds.
The reproduction process for seals takes place either on
land or in the water. What is very surprising is that the young
are all born on land rather than in the water. The mothers are
very caring towards their young pups. They smell it and make a
call that their pup will instantly memorize. It is through the
smell and those calls that they will be able to continually
communicate with each other and to find each other.
These behaviors are extremely important during the first few
moments of life. If the mother doesn’t smell and recognize her
offspring, she will refuse to feed it. As a result these pups
will starve to death. Sometimes the males are too aggressive in
the area and they will trample the offspring if the females
can’t protect them. Some of the pups have been able to nurse
from other females when they are abandoned by their own
mother’s. This generally will only occur when a female has lost
her own pup.
The pups are fed milk from the mother’s body for the first
month of life. They can gain more than 50 pounds during this
period of time. It is exhausting for the mother to feed like
this. In fact, she can lose up to 150 pounds during that
feeding process. The milk is very rich in fat so that the pups
develop the layers of blubber they need to stay warm enough.
The mother doesn’t leave the pup during the first month of life
to get food herself. When she does have to go, she won’t return
to the pup for further feedings.
What researchers have found is that the pup is able to
survive on what it has been fed for about two full weeks. At
that point the urge to eat occurs and they will move to the
water where it will feed itself. Not all species of seal
mother’s fast though so they take their pups with them into the
water while they feed. When there are twins, the female will
usually not feed one of them as her body can’t sustain feeding
both of them.
The live span for a seal depends on the species of it and the
natural environment it is in. Some of them have been known to
live up to 50 years.
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