Title: Marine Mammals
1Marine Mammals
2The ancestors of marine mammals lived on land
3- whales and dolphins 60 mya
- - oldest marine mammals
- - evolved from hyena-like land
animals
- seals, sea lions 20-25 mya
- - evolved from bear-like ancestor
-
- sea otters 5-7 mya
- - evolved from weasel-like ancestors
-
4- Whales dolphins most modified from land
mammals -
- ? nostrils moved to top of head (blowhole)
- ? recognizable, modified arms/hand-bones in
flippers - ? upper leg bone still present in some species
- ? fur/ whiskers still seen in embryo
- ? no external ears
- use blubber to stay warm
5- Seals somewhat modified from land mammals
-
- ? nostrils near mouth
- ? fore-flippers (finger bones) and back
flippers (w/ distinct toes) - ? fur and whiskers, and blubber to stay warm
- ? external ears often still visible
- ? portion of life on land
6- Sea otters similar to terrestrial relatives
-
- ? other than webbed feet for swimming, very
closely resemble - land-dwelling relatives in the weasel
family - ? unlike whales and seals, sea otters do not
have blubber to keep - them warm
-
7Cetacean Evolution
- Cetaceans whales, dolphins, and porpoises
- Latin "cetus" (a large sea animal)
8- Ancestor of cetaceans hyena-like pakicetid
- Pakicetids land animals with hoof-like claws
- likely hunted along the shore for fish
- Over time, pakicetids moved farther into the
water - (food? predators?) began to adapt to aquatic
- environment
- Over millions of years - evolved into a
primitive - group of whales ? archaeocetes ?small,
seal-like - animals, with four legs and few marine
- specializations
- Paddle-like flippers replaced limbs to help them
- move in water
- Uultimately evolved into whales
pakicetid
whale
9 2 groups of cetaceans
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11- Cetaceans have lost external ear-
- sound waves travel faster in water than air-
external ear not needed - inner ear - so well developed that cetaceans
hear sounds tens of miles away can discern
direction sound comes from - Some cetaceans use echolocation-
- emit a sound which bounces off an object and
returns to them through - jawbone to ear
- can discern size, shape and movement of the
object, catch fast-swimming prey in total
darkness (dolphins bb pellet vs. corn kernel 50
ft away)
12- Cetaceans have lost the fur of their terrestrial
ancestors - to keep warm in cold ocean waters? thick layer
of insulating fat - fat serves to sustain animals over periods of
fasting when food is scarce - Cetacean milk, on average, contains 40 fat
- Cow milk
- Human milk
- Why so much fat in milk??
4 fat
2 fat
- cetaceans nurse underwater cuts down on
feeding time
- young need to quickly put on fat for insulation
against cold
- fuels rapid development- increases chances of
young - surviving (grey whales gain 8 lbs per hr
nursing some whales - double their birth weight in 7 days! - humans
180 days to double)
13How is being a whale in the ocean similar to
being a kangaroo rat in the desert?
getting fresh water is a major challenge
- highly lobulated kidneys super-filters
-remove excess salts - fresh water from fish eaten
- the metabolism of fats liberates water
14Breathing and Diving cetaceans dive to
incredible depths while feeding
- blowholes close underwater
- blood vessels constrict - blood sent only to
essential organs
- heart beat slows - up to 50 of normal
- metabolism and body temp. drop less oxygen used
- stored oxygen in the myoglobin of muscles
released
15- Migrations
- Many whales migrate thousands of miles each year
e.g. humpbacks and grey whales travel up to
14,000 miles round-trip each year in their
migrations - summer months- whales feed in Arctic waters
- travel to low-latitudes to give birth in warm
waters (Baja Mexico) - calves born with little blubber- need warm,
protected waters
16PINNIPEDS
seals, sea lions, walrus pinnipedia Latin as
"fin foot
17- Three families of living pinnipeds
- Phocidae (earless seals or true seals) e.g.
elephant seals, harbor seals - no external ear flaps
- small front flippers
- move on land by galluphing-
- wormlike undulating motion
- Can not bend hind flippers forward
- Otaridae (eared seals) e.g. sea lions
- external ear flaps
- large front flippers that help seal move on land
- can rotate the hind flipper forward to use
pelvic bone - to move on land
18All pinnipeds come ashore to breed, give birth
and nurse their young!
19In California, our main pinnipeds are
- elephant seals
- sea lions
- harbor seals
20Sea Otters most recently moved to sea
21Scientific Name Enhydra lutris
- Very similar to ancestors in weasel family
- carnivores strong canine teeth for tearing
food, flat molars for crushing - external ears
- fur and whiskers
- arms and legs rather than fins
22- Adaptations for living in the water
- flattened tail and flipper-like hind feet for
propulsion - lung size 2.5 X the size in land mammal
relatives
23Keeping Warm
sea otters dont have blubber extremely thick
fur - about 600,000 per square inch!! keep warm
by trapping air beneath their thick fur-
trapped air acts as a layer of insulation
must eat 20 - 25 of their body weight each day
to maintain a high level of internal heat
production to stay warm
24- Feeding
- one of only a few animals known to use tools
- generalists feed on about 40 different marine
invertebrates - generally forage for food in depths of 60 ft. or
less - use tools to dislodge prey from rocky areas,
open shells - have a loose pouch of skin under each foreleg
which is used to hold food items gathered from
the sea bottom -
25Female otters live 15-20 years and males 10-15
years Max. sea otter weight about 100 lbs.
26- sea otter females will mate with one-several
males - she will have her first pup around age 4 and
continue to - reproduce until about age 15
- gestation is about 7 months and pups are
dependent on - the mother for about 5 months post birth
27NEXT UP.. ELEPHANT SEALS