Scientists home in on seals’ amazing navigation skills
November 20th, 2011 - 5:13 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Nov 20 (IANS)Some seals can point out on the spot they had been born even after spending five years out at sea, a study reveals.
Antarctic fur seals’, arguably the most accurate of any sea mammal, has a remarkable instinct that allows them to return to the spot where they were born to give birth to their own pups.
Nearly four million of the sea mammals breed in huge colonies on the beaches of South Georgia in the southern Atlantic every year, the journal of Mammalian Biology and Planet Earth Online reported.
After being born, the seals spend five years out at sea feeding before returning to the island to breed, the Telegraph said.
While the Global Positioning System (GPS), which use satellites orbiting the earth, can pinpoint a location to an accuracy of around 15 feet, the seals were found to be accurate down to as little as six feet.
This feat has baffled scientists, but they believe the creatures use a kind of internal compass that helps them find their way across the Southern Ocean to the correct location on the beach.
Using radio tags placed on 335 seals shortly after they were born, researchers at the British Antarctic Survey have discovered that each seal returns to exactly the same location on the beach once they start breeding year after year.
“We don’t know exactly why but it is common among sea birds and other marine mammals to breed in large colonies. Antarctic fur seals are among the most site faithful, on an average female seals were giving birth to their pups to within 12 metres of where they were pupped themselves. Some individuals returned to within one body length of where they had been born,” said Jaume Forcada, scientist who led the study.
“It is surprising as these seals can travel really long distances - they go up as far as Uruguay and down as far as the Antarctic peninsula, we don’t have any evidence of a navigation system yet, but there must be something really, really strong that brings them back to the same spot,” she said.
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Tags: antarctic peninsula, british antarctic survey, correct location, fur seals, giving birth, global positioning system, global positioning system gps, internal compass, long distances, mammalian biology, marine mammals, navigation skills, navigation system, planet earth, radio tags, sea birds, sea mammal, sea mammals, six feet, southern ocean