Marine Mammals

What is a marine mammal?

Marine mammals are specialized animals that make the sea their home for all or part of their life. They are classified into four distinct taxonomic groups: cetaceans (whale, dolphins and porpoises), pinnipeds (seals, sea lions and walruses), fissipeds (sea otters and polar bears) and sirenians (manatees and dugongs).

Each taxonomic group evolved from different groups of land mammals. But despite their different origins, they evolved similar features. This is an example of convergent evolution, which is when different species develop similar structures because they have similar lifestyles. This is most evident in the unique adaptations that allow marine mammals to cope with the extreme temperatures, depths, pressures, darkness and density of the marine environment.

Marine mammals can be filter feeders (such as baleen whales), apex predators (orcas) or herbivores (manatees).

Five characteristics of mammals:
  • Breathe air through lungs
  • Warm-blooded (endotherms)
  • Have hair or fur (at some point during life)
  • Give birth to live young (viviparous)
  • Produce milk to nurse their young
Biodiversity of Southeast Alaska

VIRTUAL AQUARIUM

Take a virtual dive into the cold waters of the North Pacific!

Humpback whale

Megaptera novaeangliae

Humpback whales are a species of baleen whale. They occur in all oceans around the world and have one of the longest migrations of any mammal on the planet.

Orca (killer whale)

Orcinus orca

Killer whales, or orcas, are toothed whales belonging to the oceanic dolphin family, of which they are the largest member.

Dall's porpoise

Phocoenoides dalli

Dall’s porpoises are a species of porpoise found only in the North Pacific.

Steller Sea Lion

Eumetopias jubatus

Steller sea lions are also known as the northern sea lion. They are highly social animals found in the North Pacific.

Harbor seal

Phoca vitulina

Harbor seals are one of the most common marine mammals in the US. They inhabit both the Pacific and the Atlantic Oceans.

Sea otter

Enhydra lutris

Sea otters are the largest member of the weasel family. They are able to spend their entire lives without needing to leave the ocean.

Taxonomic Groups

There are four taxonomic groups of marine mammals.
CETACEANS
PINNIPEDS
FISSIPEDS
SIRENIANS
Whales, dolphins and porpoises

Cetaceans are completely aquatic mammals and cannot survive on land. They feed, mate, calve and suckle their young in the water. There are over 70 different cetacean species in the world.

Because their bodies are constantly supported by water, they are among Earth’s largest species. Their large size may be a unique adaptation relating to food storage or heat conservation in cold water, too. Other adaptations include:

  • They lack hindlimbs, their forelimbs are modified into flippers, their bodies are streamlined and elongated, and their tails are developed into horizontal flukes for propulsion
  • Whales have blubber for insulating internal organs and storing energy (2 inches thick in some dolphins to more than 2 feet in Bowhead whales)
  • Some are capable of swimming up to 25 mph, diving to depths of 10,000 feet, and can remain submerged up to 2 hours
  • They breathe through nostrils (called a blowhole) on top of head which are positioned to easily exchange air when surfacing after a dive
  • Their smooth, almost hairless skin reduces drag during swimming
There are two groups of whales:
Baleen Whales
Toothed Whales

Baleen whales (Mysticeti) are filter feeders which include humpback, blue, minke, fin, sei and bowhead whales. They are very large animals and must consume huge quantities of prey. They have rows of baleen plates made of keratin (the same substance that makes up our hair and fingernails). They forage for zooplankton and small fish by skimming or gulping huge amounts of prey and water, forcing the water back out their mouths and past their baleen which acts as strainers to trap the prey on the inside so they can be swallowed.

Humpback Whale Baleen (©Kelly Bakos)
Humpback whale baleen

In plankton eaters such as North Pacific right whales, the baleen is silky and fine for filtering zooplankton. In humpback whales, which subsist on krill and fish, the hair is much coarser.

Some whales such as humpback whales herd krill and small fish, such as herring, by blowing curtains of bubbles around them, which traps the fish within a “net.” The whales then swim up inside the net and engulf the trapped fish. This method of feeding is called bubble-net feeding.

Bubble net at surface (©Kelly Bakos)
Bubble-net at surface

 

Humpback Whales Bubblenet Feeding (©Kelly Bakos)
Humpback whales bubble-net feeding

Baleen whales have two nostrils. They are not known to use echolocation.

Humpback Whale Blowholes (©Barry Bracken)
Humpback whale nostrils

 

Fun Fact: Baleen-feeding whales do not need to dive deep and seldom venture below 300ft.

 

Humpback Whale Sleeping (©Kelly Bakos)
Humpback spout
Humpback Whale Tail Slap (©Kelly Bakos)
Humpback tail slapping
Humpback Whale Migration (©Kelly Bakos)
Humpback whales
Humpback Whale Fluke (©Kelly Bakos)
Humpback fluke

Toothed whales (Odontoceti) have teeth that are used to strain or grasp prey, primarily fish and squid. This suborder includes sperm whales, beaked whales, orcas, dolphins, belugas, narwhals and porpoises.

Toothed whales are generally meat eaters and can eat larger prey such as fish (salmon and cod), and some toothed whales such as orcas even prey upon other marine mammals including porpoises, seals and sea lions.

Toothed whales have a single nostril, or blowhole.

Orca (©Kelly Bakos)

They use echolocation, or sonar, to find prey. They emit sounds that bounce off solid objects and return to them (similar to an echo) which helps them “see” their surroundings.

Toothed whales are social and generally live in groups or pods (such as orcas).

Male and Female Orcas (©Kelly Bakos)

Fun Fact: Toothed whales can generally dive down to 900 feet, but sperm whales can stay under for up to 90 minutes and dive deeper than 8000 feet. They are the largest toothed whale and the deepest diving cetacean.

 

Rooster Tail Splash of Dall's Porpoise (©Kelly Bakos)
Dall’s porpoise
Female Resident Orca (©Kelly Bakos)
Orca (Killer whale)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seals, sea lions and walruses

Pinnipedia means fin-footed. They are semi-aquatic carnivores that use their flippers to move both in the water and on land or ice. They have adapted to amphibious marine existence and are predators that feed mostly on fish and squid. While they forage at sea, most come ashore or onto ice at some time during the year to mate, give birth, suckle their young and to molt.

Pinnipeds are adapted to exist both in marine and terrestrial environments:

  • They have four webbed flippers used to propel themselves in water and to be mobile on land
  • They have sensory organs adapted to function in both air and water. They have large eyes and well-developed whiskers. These provide underwater vision and the ability to feed in dimly lit water.
  • Their tail and ears are small and limit drag
  • Their molars are modified for consuming prey whole or in chunks (not for chewing)
  • They have both fur and blubber. The fur is shed or molted annually, but they are permanently insulated by blubber. Their blubber also serves as an energy reserve during long periods of fasting (up to a month) and also helps with buoyancy.
  • Most are large, which helps conserve body heat because they have less surface area for their size and lose less body heat
  • Pelvis, spine and shoulders adapted for efficient swimming while still allowing effective locomotion on land
  • Present in habitats ranging from tropics to ice, coastal to pelagic waters, and are migratory or sedentary
  • Need to breed on land

Fun Fact: Some pinnipeds such as seals are capable of long, deep repetitive dives to depths of 4500 feet and up to 2 hours!

There are three types of pinnipeds:

Phocids
Otariids
Odobenids

Phocids are earless (or “true”) seals and include harbor seals and elephant seals. They have no visible ear flaps (called pinnae). Other characteristics that define Phocids include:

  • They cannot pull their hind flippers under their body while on land
  • Their diet varies by species (fish, squid or invertebrates)
  • They have short necks and flippers
  • They are graceful swimmers but are not agile on land and typically “phocidulate,” which means they move on land by undulating or heaving the body in a caterpillar-like manner using foreflippers to pull themselves along
  • In water their hindflippers spread side to side to move them along and foreflippers are used for steering
  • Except for elephant seals, males and females generally similar in size and shape
  • They breed in the water, on shore or on ice but except for elephant seals they don’t breed in rookeries
  • Pups grow at fast rate and are weaned young and abruptly after brief lactation during which the mothers usually fast (they are weaned sometimes in as short as a month!)

 

Harbor Seals on Ice (©Kelly Bakos) (©Kelly Bakos)
Seals hauled out on ice
Harbor Seal and Newborn Pup (©Kelly Bakos)
Harbor seal pup
Harbor Seals
Harbor seals
Harbor Seal in Water (©Kelly Bakos)
Harbor seal

 

 

 

 

 

Otariids are considered the eared seals, which are sea lions and fur seals. They have visible ear flaps (pinnae). Other characteristics include:

  • They are quadrupedal on land, which means they can use all four limbs to walk. They are able to pull their hind flippers under their body and extend the front flipper for four-legged movement. Front flippers can be rotated backward to support the body, allowing the animal to sit on land with its head and neck raised.
  • They swim using long front flippers for propulsion and hind flippers for steering
  • They are opportunistic feeders and mostly feed on fish and squid
  • Sea lions lack the dense, waterproof underfur, but fur seals have short, dense layer of hair close to the skin, which traps air and provides waterproof insulation plus longer, less dense outer layer of hair
  • Males are larger than females
  • Females breed with dominant males that defend territories on breeding beaches or rookeries
  • Pups are born on rookeries and may be dependent on mothers for up to a year or more

 

Steller Sea Lion Haulout (©Kelly Bakos)
Steller sea lion haulout
Territorial Steller Sea Lion (©Kelly Bakos)
Territorial male
Steller Sea Lions Periscoping (©Kelly Bakos)
Periscoping
Steller Sea Lion - Ear Flaps and Whiskers (©Kelly Bakos)
Steller sea lion

 

 

 

 

 

Odobenids are walruses. They have a combination of phocid and otariid traits:

  • They have no ear flaps (pinnae)
  • They are quadrupedal on land
  • Their upper canines are elongated and develop into tusks (in both males and females), which are used for defense and to hold or anchor to ice
  • They are benthic feeders, which means they feed upon bottom invertebrates, particularly clams, and suck up food as they move along the bottom
  • Their stiff whiskers probably act as feelers
Sea otters and polar bears

Fissipeds are split-footed. They spend all or some of their time on land but hunt for food in the water. They are relatively new to marine environment and lack many physiologic adaptations to marine life but are considered marine mammals because of the roles they play in marine environment. In the North Pacific, the fissipeds include sea otters and polar bears.

Fissipeds are related to terrestrial carnivores, like weasels and bears. Other Fissipeds include Felidae (cats) and Canidae (dogs).

Sea Otters
Polar Bears

Sea otters are part of the weasel family (Mustelidae) and live primarily a marine life. They are well adapted to life on the water:

  • They rest, mate, give birth and suckle their young in the water
  • Their hind limbs are webbed for swimming, but their front paws are padded with separate clawed digits and are used to manipulate food, groom and hold tools for opening shellfish
  • Their tail is long and oar-like
  • Sea otters float on the surface primarily on their backs (river otters generally swim or float on their bellies when in the water)
  • They lack blubber but are insulated by air trapped in their thick fur which is the most dense among all mammals – grooming is an important activity to ensure the waterproof, insulating quality of the underfur, which is a key element for thermoregulation and heat conservation in the cold water
  • Unlike other carnivores, their teeth have no sharp cutting edges and the canines are blunt and rounded, which is an adaptation that allows them to crush their invertebrate prey, many of which have strong exoskeletons
  • They require 15 to 20 pounds of food every day and eat sea urchins, abalone, mussels, crabs, other invertebrates and even fish

Fun Fact: Sea otters can dive for 5 minutes and up to 180 feet!

Sea Otter in Kelp (©Kelly Bakos)
Sea otter in kelp
Sea Otter Grooming (©Kelly Bakos)
Grooming
Sea Otter Eating (©Kelly Bakos)
Eating prey
Sea Otter Holding Pup (©Kelly Bakos)
Sea otter holding pup

 

 

 

 

 

Polar bears are part of the bear family (Ursidae) and spend most of their lives associated with marine ice and waters. They have unique adaptations:

  • They are competent swimmers, but are the least adapted marine mammal to aquatic existence
  • They rest, mate, give birth and suckle their young on the ice
  • They are vulnerable to reductions in extent and duration of sea ice
  • They have a unique white waterproof pelage (fur)
  • They store large amounts of fat, which allows them to fast for long periods during the winter denning season and when food is scarce
  • They are the largest species of bear, but their ears are the smallest, which is an adaptation to the cold arctic environment
  • They have partially webbed forepaws, which is an adaptation for swimming
  • They may wander a few hundred miles inland into tundra, taiga, even coniferous forest habitats
  • They have circumpolar distribution (distribution in high latitudes around one of the poles)
  • They occupy fast-ice and pack-ice where they prey upon blubbered seals, particularly ringed seals and bearded seals
  • They stalk prey at breathing holes or when seals are hauled out on the ice
  • They are solitary and make seasonal migrations between 1200 and 2500 miles across the ice and occasionally swim 60 miles or more to open water
  • They are fast runners on ice reaching speeds of 25 to 30 mph when chasing seals

Fun Fact: They are thought to have diverged from a Siberian population of Brown bears less than 1 million years ago.

Manatees and dugongs

Sirenians are an order of aquatic, heavy boned and herbivorous mammals (manatees and dugongs) that inhabit coastal areas, estuaries and rivers. They are named after the sirens, which are mythical Greek sea nymphs and mermaids.

Current day dugongs are related to the extinct Steller’s sea cow of the Bering Sea, which was discovered in 1741 and extinct by 1768. 

Adaptations

Marine mammals have several adaptations for surviving in the extreme demands of marine environments.
Extreme Temperatures
Depths
Pressure
Darkness
Density of water
Thermoregulation

The North Pacific ocean temperatures are COLD. Below 200 meters the water temperature approaches freezing. Marine mammals are adapted to deal efficiently with these temperatures.

  • They have large bodies with small surface to volume ratio, which reduces heat loss.
  • Marine mammals have blubber (seals and whales) or thick underfur (otters) for insulation. Blubber serves the dual purpose of insulating internal organs while also storing energy.
  • They have complex circulatory systems in their extremities which is used to conserve and dissipate heat.
  • Some young marine mammals (pinnipeds and cetaceans) grow fast on milk with 40-50% fat (human milk is 3.3% milk).
  • To offset the low temperatures their mouth and extremities are exposed to, marine mammals have a network of blood vessels in their tongues and apendages that transfers heat from warm blood into vessels that carry blood back to the body core. This is a counter heat exchange where heat from the arteries is transferred to the veins as they pass each other before getting to the extremities, which helps reduce heat loss.
Efficient oxygen storage and use

To dive deeply, marine mammals must be able to go a long time without breathing and keep their vital organs supplied with oxygen. Some mammals will stay down as long as 90 minutes, which is a long time to go without a breath! They use oxygen more efficiently and are better at absorbing oxygen from the air and storing it in their blood and muscles.

  • To get as much oxygen as possible before dives, pinnepeds and cetaceans hold their breath for 15-30 seconds then rapidly exhale and take a new breath. This allows them to absorb as much oxygen as possible from a breath.
  • Blood chemistry allows greater oxygen retention, and during long dives marine mammals can use oxygen chemically stored in their blood and muscle. A Weddell seal can store as little as 5% of its oxygen in its lungs while is has about 70% of oxygen circulating in the body!
  • To reduce oxygen consumption when they dive, the heart rate slows dramatically (bradycardia) and blood flow to non-essential parts of the body like the extremities is reduced. This makes the oxygen available where it is needed most by vital organs such as the brain and heart.
  • They have high tolerance to lactic acid and carbon dioxide so muscles can work anaerobically (without oxygen) while they hold their breath, and muscles can continue to work after muscle oxygen has been depleted.
Reduced air space

Nitrogen is 70% of air volume, and dissolves much better in high pressures such as at ocean depths. Therefore, blood picks up nitrogen while diving. If the pressure is suddenly released (by swimming to the surface quickly), some of the nitrogen will not stay dissolved and will form tiny bubbles in the bloodstream—like opening a can of soda, though that is actually carbon dioxide. The bubbles can block the flow of blood to the brain and other organs or lodge in the joints, which is a condition called the bends, or decompression sickness. Marine mammals don’t get the bends because they have adaptations that prevent nitrogen from dissolving in the blood:

  • Their lungs and ribs are collapsible. By making sure air is pushed out of the lungs it is moved into areas where gas exchange does not occur. This means marine mammals have fewer problems with changing pressure. It also ensures there is no extra air which is both buoyant and easily compressed, which can cause collapsed lungs at high pressures or depths.
  • Some pinnipeds exhale before they dive to reduce the amount of air and nitrogen in their lungs.
  • Their air spaces are minimized (such as reduced ear canals and sinuses) or air spaces fill with fluid during a dive to force air out.
  • Nitrogen absorption is limited.
Sensory adaptations and communications

Marine mammals have acute tactile senses and also use a range of communication methods:

  • Pinnipeds and fissipeds (otters) have well-developed facial whiskers which help act as feelers.
  • They have large eyes that provide underwater vision and the ability to feed in dimly lit water.
  • Many marine mammals communicate under water with sound, and some species (orcas) use echolocation to locate prey and avoid obstacles. They emit sound waves (sonar) which travels five times faster in water than air and listen for the echoes that are reflected back from surrounding objects. The time it takes the echoes to return tells the animal how far away the object is.
  • Some marine mammals have adaptations for receiving sounds. Fatty structures (melons) on the forehead of toothed whales appears to focus and direct the sound to sensitive inner ears. Incoming sound waves are received primarily by the lower jaw which transmits the sound to sensitive inner ears.
  • Marine mammals without vocal chords vocalize by recycling air, slapping flukes or flippers on surface as warning signal (humpback whales), clap jaws (dolphins) as a threat, breach as a warning signal or to scan the surface or remove parasites. Many of these sounds travel long distances both underwater and along the surface of the water.
  • Cetaceans produce a variety of sounds for socializing. Orcas have more than 70 calls, some are ‘signatures’ to a particular animal or ‘dialects’ specific to certain pods. Humpback whales famously “sing” while coordinating their cooperative bubble-net feeding behaviors.
  • Pinnipeds use vocalizations for maintaining territories or to recognize each other or to attract mates or to coordinate hunts.
Anatomical adaptations

Marine mammals adapt the way they swim or are buoyant to help offset the dense medium (salt water) that they travel within. Drag is reduced by hydrodynamic body forms (take for instance the streamlined bullet shape of a seal) and appendages are modified for maximum propulsion and minimal drag (for example, large whale fins). Cetaceans have smooth, almost hairless skin reduces drag during swimming.

 

For comparison, humans adapt to the challenges of the marine environment by using submarines, compressed air, slow assents and descents, wet suits and dry suits, and submersibles with lead weights to help them sink.

Challenges

Marine mammals face several threats, particularly from human impacts. Some challenges include:
Human encroachment
Environmental change
Entanglement
Pollution and trash

Many marine mammals are threatened or endangered, largely due to historical hunting. Fur pelts were a valuable commodity, and people used the oil from whale blubber for burning lamps, making cosmetics, or making perfumes. Since 1986 there has been a ban on commercial hunting of whales, but some countries continue whaling. Some Alaska natives and other indigenous tribes can legally hunt marine mammals for subsistence and with strict quotas.

Most current threats include:

  • Competition for resources
  • Commercial overharvesting of fish, squid, shellfish stocks
  • Human disturbance, habitat destruction, boat collisions, exposure to contaminants, increased vessel traffic, poaching, harassment, noise pollution
  • Warming water temperatures
  • Loss of sea ice
  • Increased storms and changing climate patterns
  • Accidental capture in active and discarded fishing gear and lines (Gear modifications, new fishing methods and disentanglement techniques reduce likelihood of capture and increase survival of animals released from gear)
  • Plastic bags, straws, balloons and other floating debris are potentially lethal when they entangle or are consumed by marine mammals that mistake them for prey
  • Increased runoff of nutrients (such as fertilizers) feed algae and cause algal blooms
  • Toxins and pollution affect the health of marine mammals and prevent them from fighting disease.

Protections

All marine mammals in the United States are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA), which makes it illegal to harass, feed, hunt, capture or kill any marine mammal. Threatened or endangered species are species that are at risk of extinction. These species are protected in the U.S. under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). These laws play a critical role in the survival of marine mammals and the health of our ecosystem.