Seals are aquatic mammals that belong to the Mammalian superfamily Pinnipedia. This makes them closely related to sea lions and walruses and much more distantly related to whales, dolphins, and porpoises. "True seals" are recognizable by their lack of ears. Sea lions and fur seals have small ear flaps, but otherwise look very similar to seals.
Seals typically eat a diet of marine invertebrates and small fishes. They also serve as food for sharks and large dolphins (like the orca).
What are the special features about antarctic fur seals ?
Yes, only they are not called SEALS, instead it is called the S.A.S (Special Air Service).
Obviously SEALs. Marines aren't Special Forces. SEALs are Tier 1(DEVGRU), Tier 2 and kinda Tier 3.
Military/Special Operations
The US Navy SEALS is a Special Operations Group of the US Navy
Which part of the army? The SEALS are better than regular soldiers, they are a Special Operations force. The army also has its own Special Operations forces, so if it was SEALS vs INFANTRY the seals would take it, but in SEALS vs SF it could go either way.
not being seals, sea lions, or yaks.
Marines are not on par with the Seals. Marines are a regular force, seals are special operations. A more likely match would be Marine Recon Vs Seal
Yes, SEALs have transitioned from the SEALs to the CIA. Most join the agency's Special Activities Division. The timeline is different for everyone.
Yes NAVSPECWARGRU NAVal SPECial WARfare GRoUp or SEALs Sea Air Land
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The United Kingdom's equivalent of Navy SEALs can be considered as the Special Boat Service (SBS). The SBS is a Special Forces unit of the British Royal Navy and its primary role is maritime counter-terrorism, special reconnaissance, and unconventional warfare. Like the Navy SEALs, they undergo rigorous training and are highly capable in both land and maritime operations.