Yes, Northern Fur Seals spend their lives in the ocean and on land. On land they have rests on rocks, and in the ocean they search for food. Help this Helps! :)
Slugger the Sea Dog is a seal. There are a huge variety of seals but the Slugger version seams to be a leopard seal or a fur seal because of its gray coloring.
males weigh around 140 kg while females weigh 50 kg
An animal that lives in water and has hair is a beaver. Platypus also have two layers of fur coating them.
Because penguins have fur to keep them warm.
No, frogs do not have eyelashes. A frog does have eyelids. They have both an upper and lower eyelid. The upper eyelid on the frog is a skin fold and the lower eyelid is a translucent membrane.
No. The northern fur seal is an eared seal found along the north Pacific Ocean, the Bering Sea, and the Sea of Okhotsk.
they live in Antarctica
A Guadalupe Fur Seal lives in Mexico, or sometimes near the California Coast, and of course Guadalupe Island.
This animal lives in sea water in the Southern Ocean. They breed between 45 and 60 degrees S, and 70 degrees W and 80 degrees E among sub-Antarctic islands. Their winter range is undiscovered.
A Hudson Seal fur is a muskrat fur dyed to imitate seal fur. The name Hudson Seal Fur was patented in 1907.
The average lifespan of an Antarctic fur seal is between 12 to 30 years in the wild, with the average being around 20. Females generally live several years longer than males.
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a fur seal lives in antarctica.
Antarctic fur seal was created in 1875.
Subantarctic fur seal was created in 1872.
Northern fur seal was created in 1758.
Antarctic fur seal, A. gazellaGuadalupe fur seal, A. townsendiJuan Fernández fur seal, A. philippiiGalápagos fur seal, A. galapagoensisBrown fur seal (or Cape fur seal), A. pusillusNew Zealand fur seal, A. forsteri (validity questionable - see below)Subantarctic fur seal, A. tropicalisSouth American fur seal, A. australisNorthern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus)Steller's sea lion, E. jubatusAustralian sea lion, N. cinereaSouth American sea lion, O. flavescensNew Zealand sea lion or Hooker's sea lion, P. hookeriCalifornia sea lion, Z. californianusGalapagos sea lion, Z. wollebaeki