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Antarctic Fur Seal - Fact File


Antarctic fur seals
Antarctic fur seals. Photo AAD

Vital Statistics

Scientific name: Arctocephalus gazella

Weight: Females: 45 kg; males: 188 kg

Length: Females: 1.2 m; males: 1.9 m

Breeding age: 3-4 years for females, 7 years for males

Breeding frequency: Annual

Breeding season: November - late December

Age to weaning: 4 months

Longevity: 23 years for females, 15 years for males





Name Derivation

Arctocephalus roughly translates to ‘bear-headed’, while the species name is attributed to the SMS Gazelle, the vessel that collected the first specimen from Kerguelen Island.

Foraging Statistics

What do I eat? Myctophid fish around Heard Island, Antarctic krill around South Georgia

What eats me? Leopard seals are known to hunt pups

Range trip time: From 24 hours to 3 weeks

Range trip length: 50 to > 2000 km depending on breeding stage

Depth of water where foraging: Generally to the mixed layer (< 50-60 m) but deeper dives have been recorded. Average dive depth of males (100-200 m) is deeper than that of females (<50 m)

Extreme dive depth/time: Dives of 250 m have been recorded

Distribution & Abundance

Distribution: Breeds on islands and the Antarctic Peninsula from 61°S northward to the Antarctic Convergence. Females may migrate north of the convergence, some males migrate south after the breeding season.

Abundance: Approximately 1.6 million, with some estimates as high as 4 million. 95% of the population breeds at South Georgia

Population Status

Populations are currently increasing at a mean annual rate of 9.8%, after being hunted to near-extinction by sealers in the late 18th century.

Conservation Status

The species is a listed marine species under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 and is protected by a number of international agreements (e.g. listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the Convention for the Conservation of Antarctic Seals (CCAS) under the Antarctic Treaty).

Antarctic fur seals are also covered by the Action Plan for Australian Seals 1999.

General Comments

Antarctic fur seals are more commonly seen on the eastern side of Heard Island, where the largest haul-outs occur and where the highest number of pups are born.

To find more information on other Heard Island seals click on the links below.



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Cool Facts
  • Antarctic fur seals mate only 6-8 days after the females give birth - the females are pregnant almost all year round
  • Related Pages

    Australian Antarctic Division seal research

    Seal research undertaken on the 2003/2004 Heard Island expedition

    Southern elephant seals

    Subantarctic fur seals

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