Steller's Sea Cow
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{{Taxobox | color = pink | name = Steller's Sea Cow | status = Conservation status: Extinct{{#if:{{{when|}}}| (1768) }} | image = Steller.gif | image_width = 250px | regnum = Animalia | phylum = Chordata | classis = Mammalia | ordo = Sirenia | familia = Dugongidae | subfamilia = Hydrodamalinae | subfamilia_authority = Palmer, 1895 | genus = Hydrodamalis | genus_authority = Retzius, 1794 | species = H. gigas | binomial = Hydrodamalis gigas | binomial_authority = (Zimmermann, 1780) }}
Steller's Sea Cow (Hydrodamalis gigas) is an extinct large sirenian mammal formerly found near the Asiatic coast of the Bering Sea. It was discovered in the Bering Strait in 1741 by the naturalist Georg Steller, who was traveling with the explorer Vitus Bering. A small population lived in the arctic waters around Bering Island and nearby Copper Island.
The sea cow grew up to 7.5-7.9 meters long and weighed up to 8-11 tonnes, much larger than the manatee or dugong. It looked somewhat like a large seal, but had two stout forelimbs and a whale-like tail. According to Steller, "The animal never comes out on shore, but always lives in the water. Its skin is black and thick, like the bark of an old oak..., its head in proportion to the body is small..., it has no teeth, but only two flat white bones—one above, the other below". It was completely tame, according to Steller. They fed on a variety of kelp. Wherever sea cows had been feeding, heaps of stalks and roots of kelp were washed ashore.
The population of sea cows was small in number and limited in range when Steller first described them. They were wiped out quickly by the sailors, seal hunters, and fur traders that followed Bering's route past the islands to Alaska, who hunted them both for food and for their skins, which were used to make boats. They were also hunted for their valuable subcutaneous fat, which was not only used for food (usually as a butter substitute), but also for oil lamps because it did not give off any smoke or odor. By 1768, less than 30 years after it had been discovered, Steller's Sea Cow was extinct.
There are still sporadic reports of sea cow-like animals from the Bering area, the Arctic, and Greenland, so it has been suggested that small populations of the animal may have survived to the present day. This remains so far unproven. They might be around there somewhere though, just hiding.
Sea Cows appear in Kipling's short story "The White Seal", where they show the title character a place of refuge from human hunters. Kipling probably knew (a) that the Sea Cow was considered extinct and that (b) nevertheless people sometimes claimed to have seen them. Thus, his suggestion that they are around, but mostly hiding.
References
See also
External links
- Animal Diversity Web
- Steller's Sea Cow information from the AMIQ Institute
- Georg Steller's De bestiis marinis (1751)(in English)
- Hans Rothauscher's Die Stellersche Seekuh site (in German & English)de:Stellers Seekuh
et:Stelleri meriõhv es:Hydrodamalis gigas he:פרת הים nl:Stellerzeekoe no:Stellers sjøku ja:ステラーカイギュウ nn:Stellers sjøku pl:Krowa morska pt:Dugongo de Steller ru:Стеллерова корова zh:大海牛 sv:Stellers sjöko