It is the Nerpa, the Baikal seal.
Baikal seal
Lake Baikal is in Southern Siberia in Russia.
no, of course
Baikal seal
Lake Baikal is land locked lake not connected to other water bodies and most primitive hence it has different fauna .
One of the types of animals in Lake Baikal are the Fresh Water Seals, also known as the only fresh water seals in the world. :-)
The Angara River leaves Lake Baikal at Port Baikal/Listvyanka from where it flows north and west until it runs into the Yenisey River north of Krasnoyarsk and flows into the Kara Sea.
Very much so. Lake Baikal is over 5,000ft deep and millions of years old. Lake Superior by comparison is a little puddle only 1,300ft deep and a young pup only 10,000 years old.
It is the only freshwater seal
Lake Bakail is not only deepest lake in the world; it is also the deepest freshwater lake, and the oldest and most voluminous in the entire world! It lies in Southern Siberia in Russia (Asia) between Irkutsk Oblast to the northwest and Buryatia to the southeast. It is 1,638 metres deep. It is 636 km long and is the world's sixth largest lake and 1,181 metres of it is below sea level. It contains 20% of the world's fresh water which is so clear that divers suffer from vertigo. Based on sediment at the bottom, it is also the world's oldest lake at 25 million years, based on an ancient fault, the Olkhon Crevice. 2,000 species of plant and animal life have been identified in Lake Baikal, 75% of which appears nowhere else in the world.=====Lake Baikal in southern Siberia has a maximum depth of 1,642 m (5,387 ft). It is also the worlds biggest fresh water lake by volume with 23,615.39 km³ (5,700 cu mi) of fresh water.
The answer to that question depends on what you measure to establish "largest".Lake Superior between Michigan and Ontario is the freshwater lake with the largest surface area 82,360 km2 (31,800 square miles).Lake Baikal, located in Siberia, Russia, has a surface area of only 31,727 km2 (12,250 square miles) but it is the lake with the largest water volume in the world, holding about 20% of the world's total fresh water. At 1,620 meters, nearly a mile deep, Lake Baikal is also without doubt the world's deepest lake.There are a couple of possible answers to this question: Largest in area (square miles):Lake Huron/Michigan (if you consider it a single body of water) - 45,445 sq. milesLake Superior - 31,820 sq. milesLargest in volume (cubic miles):Lake Baikal - 5,700 cu. milesLake Baikal
Manatees and dugongs.