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Bruce Leventhal

I am an educator, naturalist, & photographer. I believe it is possible to speak with images & paint with words in a way that can promote real change.
  • The Way We See It
  • Portfolios
    • Winter in Japan (New)
    • Bears
    • The Wild BC Coast
    • Southern Iceland
    • Costa Rica
    • East Africa
    • North America
    • Europe
    • Adventures in Black and White
    • Docks
  • Blog
  • Blog Archives
  • Did You Know
  • Search This Site
  • About

Angry Bachelors (Mirounga angustirostris) - San Simeon, CA

Nikon D300s and Nikon 200-400mm f4.0 AFS VR1

Did You Know (1)?

January 10, 2015 in January 2015

Did you know that the Northern Elephant Seal (Mirounga angustirostris) was hunted so heavily in the 18th century that by the 1870’s the global population was fewer than one-hundred individual seals? Hunted for the oil in their blubber, the species was decimated. Were it not for a population of eight survivors on Guadalupe Island off the coast of Baja, Mexico, the Northern Elephant Seal would be extinct today. Inbreeding and the rare survivor of a genetic bottleneck, the elephant seal population now exceeds 100,000 individuals and can be easily viewed during the breeding season throughout rookeries between San Luis Obispo and San Francisco. 

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Tags: Ecology, Environmentalism, Elephant Seal, Mammals, Did You Know?
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