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Hooded seals shed their lanugo fur in the womb and are born with a thin non lanugo fur coat, which is a less efficient thermoregulating fur coat compared to some to other seal species (e.g., leopard seals). [26]
The infraorder Pinnipedia consists of 3 families containing 34 extant species belonging to 22 genera and divided into 48 extant subspecies, as well the extinct Caribbean monk seal and Japanese sea lion species, which are the only pinniped species to go extinct since prehistoric times. This does not include hybrid species or extinct prehistoric ...
Harvested species included harp seals, hooded seals, Caspian seals, elephant seals, walruses and all species of fur seal. [169] After the 1960s, the harvesting of seals decreased substantially as an industry [167] after the Canadian government implemented measures to protect female seals and restrict the hunting season. [170]
Gray seals and harbor seals are the two seal species found in the Seacoast year-round, while in the winter months, the region is also visited by harp and hooded seals that arrive from Arctic ...
Exploited species included harp seals, hooded seals, Caspian seals, elephant seals, walruses and all species of fur seal. [100] The scale of seal harvesting decreased substantially after the 1960s, [101] after the Canadian government reduced the length of the hunting season and implemented measures to protect adult females. [102]
[2] [3] The Phocinae is divided into three extant tribes: Erignathini (represented by the sole extant bearded seal Erignathus barbatus), Cystophorini (another extant monotypic tribe represented by hooded seal Cystophora cristata), and Phocini (represented by the rest of the other surviving species in the subfamily). Members of both Erignathini ...
Seal pups typically eat no food and drink no water during the period, although some polar species eat snow. The postweaning fast ranges from two weeks in the hooded seal to 9–12 weeks in the northern elephant seal. [19]
Nunavut has several species of mammals (ᐱᓱᒃᑎ, pisukti), [1] of which the Inuit found use for almost all. The larger animals such as the caribou would be eaten, with the skin used for tents and clothing and the sinew used for thread. In lean times even animals such as the fox would have been eaten and some people did eat it even when ...