. Medical and Hospital News .




.
FLORA AND FAUNA
Elephant seal travels 18,000 miles
by Staff Writers
New York NY (SPX) Dec 19, 2011

Jackson is the male southern elephant seal tracked by the Wildlife Conservation Society that traveled an astonishing 18,000 miles. Credit: Wildlife Conservation Society.

The Wildlife Conservation Society tracked a southern elephant seal for an astonishing 18,000 miles - the equivalent of New York to Sydney and back again. WCS tracked the male seal from December, 2010, to November, 2011. The animal - nicknamed Jackson - was tagged on the beach in Admiralty Sound in Tierra del Fuego in southern Chile.

WCS conservationists fitted Jackson with a small satellite transmitter that recorded his exact location when he surfaced to breathe.

Jackson swam 1,000 miles north, 400 miles west, and 100 miles south from the original tagging location, meandering through fjords and venturing past the continental shelf as he foraged for fish and squid.

During this tracking, the WCS team analyzed the data to better understand elephant seal migratory routes.

Elephant seals are potential indicators of the health of marine ecosystems and may show how climate change influences the distribution of prey species that serve as the basis of Patagonia's rich marine ecosystem.

To protect this vast region, conservationists need to know how wildlife uses it throughout the year.

"Jackson's travels provide a roadmap of how elephant seals use the Patagonian Coast and its associated seas," said Caleb McClennen, WCS Director for Global Marine Programs.

"This information is vital to improving ocean management in the region, helping establish protected areas in the right places, and ensuring fisheries are managed sustainably without harming vulnerable marine species like the southern elephant seal."

The information WCS gathers will serve as a foundation for a new model of private-public, terrestrial-marine conservation of the Admiralty Sound, Karukinka Natural Park (a WCS private protected area), and Alberto de Agostini National Park. It will help build a broader vision for bolstering conservation efforts across the Patagonian Sea and coast.

"The Wildlife Conservation Society has a long history of working in the spectacular Patagonia region to establish protected areas and advance conservation of its rich wildlife," said Julie Kunen, WCS Director of Latin America and Caribbean.

"Individual stories like Jackson's are awe-inspiring, and also inform the science that will ultimately help protect this region."

WCS reports that Jackson has returned to Admiralty Sound, the site of the original tagging. Each year, elephant seals haul ashore in colonies to molt and find mates. The satellite transmitter is expected to work until early next year, when it will eventually fall off.

WCS has tracked more than 60 southern elephant seals via satellite on the Atlantic side of the Southern Cone since the early 1990s. Jackson represented the first southern elephant seal tagged from the Pacific side of the Southern Cone.

Elephant seals are among the largest pinnipeds in the world, reaching weights of up to 7,500 pounds and lengths of 20 feet.

Related Links
Wildlife Conservation Society
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



FLORA AND FAUNA
Butterflies: 'Twice-punished' by habitat fragmentation and climate change
Paris, France (SPX) Dec 19, 2011
New findings by Virginie Stevens (CNRS), Jean Clobert (CNRS), Michel Baguette (Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle) and colleagues show that interactions between dispersal and life-histories are complex, but general patterns emerge. The study was published as open access paper in the journal Ecology Letters. As dispersal plays a key role in gene flow among populations, its evolutionary dy ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Geography, squatting blamed for Philippine floods

Microfinancing lifts tsunami-hit Japan firms

Small fire at Japan nuclear lab; no radiation leak

Flood-hit Philippines prepares for mass burials

FLORA AND FAUNA
Lockheed Martin Delivers GPS 3 Pathfinder Satellite to Denver on Schedule

Galileo in tune as first navigation signal transmitted to Earth

Glonass satnav system targets Latin America and India

Lightweight GPS tags help research track animals of all sizes

FLORA AND FAUNA
Starving orangutans might help to better understand obesity and eating disorders in humans

Mind reading machines on their way: IBM

Follow your nose

I wanna talk like you

FLORA AND FAUNA
Evolution at warp speed: Hatcheries change salmon genetics after a single generation

Butterflies: 'Twice-punished' by habitat fragmentation and climate change

Elephant seal travels 18,000 miles

First public appearance of Chinese pandas at Scottish zoo

FLORA AND FAUNA
Hong Kong school closed in bird flu scare

A logistics approach to malaria in Africa

Nighttime images help track disease from the sky

Novel drug wipes out deadliest malaria parasite through starvation

FLORA AND FAUNA
Chinese villagers threaten government office march

China villagers warned against protest march

China starts football corruption trials

Police in China fire tear-gas, beat protesters: witnesses

FLORA AND FAUNA
China starts Mekong patrols

China deploys patrol boats on Mekong: state media

Seychelles invites China to set up anti-piracy base

Britain detains seven suspected pirates in Seychelles

FLORA AND FAUNA
Slow recovery for flood-hit Thai plants

Walker's World: 2012 looks grim

Location, location, location: Economists document key role of spatial component in economic growth

Japan to buy Chinese bonds: report


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement