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The lovable (and lethal) sea lion - Claire Simeone

  • 0:12 - 0:16
    Sunning themselves on rocks or waddling
    awkwardly across the beach,
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    it’s easy to think of these immobile
    mammals less as sea lions,
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    and more as sea house cats.
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    But don’t be fooled by their
    beachside behavior.
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    Under the waves, sea lions are
    incredible endurance hunters.
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    Hurtling around at speeds from
    4 to 18 miles an hour
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    and hunting for up to 30 hours at a time,
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    these majestic mammals live
    up to their name.
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    And thanks to a suite of
    physical adaptations,
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    finely tuned over millions of years,
    they make for resourceful foragers.
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    To find their favorite food,
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    sea lions hunt much deeper than
    many of their semi-aquatic peers.
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    With some species diving to
    depths of nearly 400 meters,
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    they’re able to cope with
    the mounting pressure
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    by collapsing their pliable rib cage,
    and compressing a pair of springy lungs.
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    This pushes air up through
    the smaller airways,
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    collapsing rings of cartilage as
    oxygen travels out from the lungs,
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    to be held in the larger, upper airways.
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    Upon surfacing, this air will be
    used to re-inflate the lungs,
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    but for now their heart slows
    down to preserve oxygen.
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    Blood flow is redirected towards
    only the most essential organs
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    like the heart, lungs, and brain,
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    which rely on reserve oxygen
    stored in blood and muscle.
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    Once they arrive at their hunting ground,
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    sea lions depend on their superior
    vision to find their prey.
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    Most mammal eyes have
    a structure called a lens–
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    a transparent, convex structure whose
    shape refracts light to enable sight.
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    In humans, this lens is curved to process
    light waves traveling through air.
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    But sea lions need to see their
    best at hundreds of meters deep.
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    To accommodate, their eyes have a much
    rounder lens to refract light underwater,
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    as well as teardrop-shaped pupils
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    which can expand to 25 times
    their original size.
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    This lets in as much light as possible,
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    helping them pinpoint their prey in
    even the dimmest conditions.
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    But once they’ve closed in,
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    they rely on something akin to a sixth
    sense to actually catch their meal.
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    Their whiskers, or vibrissae,
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    are composed of keratin
    and full of nerve fibers
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    that run deep into the connective
    tissue of their face.
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    Sea lions have full directional control
    over these whiskers,
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    which can lie flat against their face,
    or stick out at a 90-degree angle.
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    When properly tuned,
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    these whiskers can sense the slim trails
    of moving water fish leave in their wake.
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    And they’re precise enough to let
    blindfolded sea lions
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    tell the difference between objects less
    than two centimeters different in size.
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    With these tools a healthy sea lion can
    catch generous helpings of fish
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    such as anchovy, mackerel,
    and squid on every outing.
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    And with their exceptional memories, they
    can remember multiple hunting grounds,
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    including those they haven’t
    visited in decades.
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    This memory also extends to breeding
    territories and birthing areas,
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    as well as which neighbors
    are friend and foe.
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    There’s even evidence that sea lions
    can remember how to perform tasks
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    after 10 years with no
    practice in between,
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    letting them navigate old stomping
    grounds with ease.
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    Yet despite these incredible adaptations,
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    there are changes unfolding
    in their habitats
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    too rapidly for sea lions to handle.
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    As climate change warms the oceans,
    certain toxic algae species thrive.
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    This algae is harmless to
    the fish who eat it,
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    but for the sea lions which
    ingest those fish,
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    the algae’s domoic acid can trigger
    seizures and brain damage.
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    Changing ocean conditions keep
    this algae blooming year round,
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    causing more and more sea lions
    to wash up on beaches.
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    This tragic discovery is just one
    of the many ways
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    the health of aquatic animal
    communities can help us
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    better understand Earth’s oceans.
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    These red flags help us take action
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    to protect ourselves and other
    maritime mammals.
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    And the more we can learn about the
    changing ocean that sea lions inhabit,
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    the better equipped we’ll be to help
    these clever creatures thrive.
Title:
The lovable (and lethal) sea lion - Claire Simeone
Speaker:
Claire Simeone
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-lovable-and-lethal-sea-lion-claire-simeone

Sunning themselves on rocks or waddling awkwardly across the beach, it's easy to think of sea lions more as sea house cats. But don't be fooled by their beachside behavior. Under the waves, sea lions are incredible endurance hunters, reaching speeds of 18 miles an hour and hunting for up to 30 hours at a time. Claire Simeone dives into what makes these majestic mammals such resourceful foragers.

Lesson by Claire Simeone, directed by Cabong Studios.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:22

English subtitles

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