- White Coat Skins are used for making coats, very popular in the 1930's and 40's.
- Used like cow leather to make clothing. xoxo
What is the pilot whales population?
Their population number is between 440,000 and 1,370,000 Pilot Whales.
Crab Eating Seals DO NOT Eat Crabs, They Eat Krill, But Also Fish.
Despite its name, a crabeater seal eats krill.
crab squid and krill
What are ross seal prederters?
Ross seals (Ommatophoca rossii) primarily face predation from killer whales (orcas) and leopard seals. These predators target the seals due to their location in Antarctic waters, where they are often found on sea ice. While Ross seals have adaptations like excellent diving capabilities and a thick layer of blubber for insulation, they remain vulnerable to these top marine predators. Overall, their main threats come from a limited number of specialized hunters within their icy habitat.
How does red-tide affect animals in Sarasota Bay Florida?
Florida red tides are blooms (high concentrations) of a microscopic algae called Karenia brevis. These blooms can turn the water red, green or brown, but you might not always be able to see a red tide.
Florida red tides produce a toxic substance (called brevetoxin) that can kill fish. Brevetoxin affects the nervous systems of fish and other animals that live in Sarasota Bay, including birds, mammals and other sea life. Animals suffering the effects of brevetoxin may swim in circles, become paralyzed, have seizures or die. The toxin can enter the bodies of mollusks, including clams and oysters, making them poisonous to eat. People who consume these contaminated shellfish can suffer food poisoning called NSP (neurotoxic shellfish poisoning).
Red tide toxins can also be carried over land by wind, and they can cause temporary problems in people, including coughing, sneezing and watery eyes. People with chronic respiratory problems should be especially careful to avoid areas with Florida red tide toxin in the air. Swimming in waters with Florida red tide may cause skin irritations and burning eyes. For more information, please visit www.mote.org and click "Environmental Updates" followed by "Red Tide".
What type of seals eat Diatoms?
Diatoms are a type of single celled plankton. There are no seals that eat plankton. Seals eat fish, with the exception of a few types, such as the Crabeater, which eats krill, and the leopard seal, which eats penguins and seal pups.
What is a barking marine mammal called?
Seals, sea lions and walrus are all known to make barking vocalizations.
When did Aquatic Humans first leave the water?
Aquatic humans never existed, therefore, they never left the water.
Aquatic Humans and Humans are the same thing. There are a wide range of physiological traits in human beings that can be explained by an evolutionary period in human existence that involved a partial, complete and then semi-aquatic phase in human prehistory.
These features include:
Hairlessness
Streamlined body
Reduced sense of smell
Subcutaneous body fat
Bipedalism
Diving reflex
Exostoses
The Nose
Downward facing nostrils
Philtrum
Breath control
Speech
Salt Tears
Eccrine sweat skin glands
Large Sebaceous glands
Hymen
New-born swim ability
Webbed fingers and toes
Lunar Menstruation cycle
Lowest blood cell count of the apes
Highest haemoglobin per cell of the apes
Seafood diet bias
Humans are the only terrestrial animals that can voluntarily hold their breath at will.
The ability to hold and control breath is necessary for complex speech. This ability would, of course, also be needed for diving. It is likely that the ability of humans and aquatic mammals to hold their breath was an adaptation meant for diving, and that the development of complex speech was a side effect.
Also, humans have a descended larynx, which other apes do not. This allows us to gulp large amounts of air. Most animals only breathe through the nose, but the descended larynx allows humans to breather through our mouths, which allowed us to take deep breaths "prior to diving" (Watson). The larynx thus allowed early humans to spend longer periods of time underwater than they could have if they were taking shallow breaths through their noses. Complex speech is also dependent on the descended larynx. Other aquatic mammals, such as sea lions, walruses, and manatees have descended larynxes.
There is another similarity between humans and aquatic mammals: the diving reflex, also known as bradycardia, a decrease in heart rate and redistribution of blood to the brain and the organs. This is a natural reaction of humans to being submerged. Other apes do not share this ability, as they obviously have no use for it. "Humans can dive to depths of one hundred meters at the extreme but most humans can certainly dive to ten meters," which no ape would do (Watson). The diving reflex makes swimming and diving practical, and humans have no living ancestors that possess this trait. It must have been acquired at some point after humans split from apes, and this supports the idea that man evolved in an aquatic or semi-aquatic environment.
Suggestion that Pachyderms all shared a more intense evolutionary period with us and the sea. The Seal, Dugong and Walrus quite obviously going the way of the Dolphin, although there is no reason why time and the environment should not leave them where they are or move them in the direction of the land once more.
The Hippopotamus still living a semi-aquatic existence, whilst a distant relative went all the way and became the Blue Whale, fully aquatic and the largest animal to have ever lived as far as we know.
The Elephant, Tapir (both of whom have trunks [read:Snorkel] which have been shown in prehistoric times to have been moving towards the top of the skull, clearly an advantage in the water) and Rhino also share with the other Pachyderms the hairlessness seen in humans and share numerous other similarities not seen in non-aquatic or semi-aquatic mammals.
Elephants by way of interest also have webbed feet although this has atrophied as in humans. They can also swim for six hours straight and their large size is in anycase probably attributable to a long period of permanent water habitation. Elephants also show the crying response when emotional. Hardly any land creatures cry and hardly any sea creatures don't. They are also highly intelligent and have a complex language which includes Infrasound comunnication.
The Aquatic Ape Theory is at least a reasonable hypothesis, if not a fully acceptable scientific theory. It provides a sensible explanation for why human beings, while genetically similar to apes, possess so many different physical features, and how these physical adaptations could have come into being. Without the Aquatic Ape Theory, it is hard to explain the parallels between humans and aquatic mammals. Science, especially evolutionary biology, is a constantly changing field. Nothing is set in stone. The AAT may someday replace the "Savannah theory of human evolution" which most evolutionary biologists now deny they ever supported which is telling, especially since this coincided with the discovery that the whole basis for the so-called "Savannah theory" was incorrect and the environment which produced upright man was wet and wooded.
Perhaps a third theory will arise. At the very least, Elaine Morgan's books have made some scientists rethink what they have been taught about evolution.
The open sea zone is a zone in the ocean that has a depth of 200 meters and has over ten species of animals.