Crabeater Seal
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{{Taxobox | color = pink | name = Crabeater Seal | image = Krabbenfresser.jpg | image_width = 200px | regnum = Animalia | phylum = Chordata | classis = Mammalia | ordo = Carnivora | familia = Phocidae | genus = Lobodon | species = L. carcinophagus | binomial = Lobodon carcinophagus | binomial_authority = Hombron & Jacquinot, 1842 }} The Crabeater Seal, Lobodon carcinophagus, is one of the most remarkable, though least known, of the mammals of the world.
Its population probably numbers between 15 and 40 million animals, making it one of the most abundant large animals in the world.
More than one in every two seals in the world is a Crabeater Seal and the population biomass of Crabeaters is about four times that of all other pinnipeds put together †.
Its most unusual multilobed teeth enable this species to sieve krill from the water.
Image:CrabeaterSealSkullSchematic.png
Its dentition looks like a perfect strainer, but how it operates in detail is still unknown. The food of Crabeater Seals consists 98 % of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba. The seals consume over 63 million tonnes of krill each year. They live and reproduce in the pack ice zone around Antarctica.
Females are up to 200 cm length and 500 lb (230 kg) in weight.
Crabeater Seals colonized Antarctica during the late Miocene or early Pliocene (15 - 25 million years ago), at a time when the region was much warmer than today. The evolution into this strange, successful and abundant animal can be taken as a token of the bounty and continuity of krill.
Notes
† BONNER B 1995 Birds and Mammals - Antarctic Seals. in Antarctica Pergamon Press 202 - 222
External links
fr:Lobodon carcinophaga lt:Krabaėdis ruonis nl:Krabbeneter sv:Krabbätarsäl