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| Ecology and Behavior |
Steller sea lions are highly polygynous and breed in the late spring and summer. Adult males arrive before females and those that are nine years or older establish themselves on territories, which they aggressively and vociferously defend. Steller sea lions have deep voices and produce powerful low-frequency rolling roars and can be heard for long distances over the noise of wind and waves. Roaring males often bob their head up and down while vocalizing. This is in contrast to the side to side head wave California sea lion males often make when they produce their characteristic repetitive bark during interactions with con-specifics.
Pups are born from May through July, and females stay continuously ashore with their newborns for the first week to ten days after giving birth. Following this period of attendance, females make foraging excursions, primarily at night for periods of 18-25 hours, followed by time ashore to nurse their pup. Females come into estrous and mate about two weeks after giving birth. Weaning often takes place before the next breeding season, but it is not unusual to see females nursing yearlings, older juveniles, or multiple offspring.
Steller sea lions occasionally leave haul-outs in very large groups; however, sightings at sea are most often of groups of 1-12 animals. They aggregate in areas of prey abundance, including near fishing vessels, where they will feed on netted fish and by-catch. They are not considered migratory, and juveniles and subadults make most long distance trips. Adults usually forage and live near their natal colonies and return to these sites to breed. The area used by adult females for foraging in winter increases dramatically over the area used in the summer. Diving is generally to depths of 200 m or less and dive duration is usually two minutes or less, with both parameters varying by season and age of the animal. Adult females tend to dive deeper in winter than summer. Diving ability of pups and juveniles increases with age, and they routinely dive to depths of around 140 m for periods of two minutes as yearlings. The diving of adult males has not been studied. Predators include killer whales and sharks. |
| Feeding and Prey |
Steller sea lions feed on many varieties of fish and invertebrates. Much of the information on diet comes from animals living in Alaska, where Steller sea lions feed on walleye pollock, Pacific cod, Atka mackerel, herring, sand lance, several varieties of flatfish, salmon and rockfish, and invertebrates such as squid, octopus, bivalves and gastropods. Adult females with young pups feed extensively at night, switching to foraging at any time after the breeding season. |
| Threats and Status |
Steller sea lions have been important to the subsistence cultures of people living near them for long periods. Native Alaskans currently take about 300 a year for food and other products. The worldwide population of Steller sea lions declined by 64% during the period from 1960 to 1989, and is currently estimated to be approximately 100,000 animals. The decline has been most dramatic in the large populations from the Gulf of Alaska (-54%), west throughout the Aleutian Island chain (-81%), to the moderately-sized Russian population (-74%). During the same period, the moderately-sized southeastern Alaska population increased (+70%). The reasons for these changes and the overall serious decline are unclear, but are the subject of intensive ongoing investigations. Factors hypothesized include, taken both alone and in combination with each other: the direct and indirect effects of large-scale commercial fisheries on key Steller sea lion prey species, long-term ecosystem shifts, and changes in behavior by a primary predator, the killer whale. |
| Links |
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For current information on the conservation status of this species, please consult the following websites:
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| References |
LOUGHLIN, T. R., M. A. PEREZ, AND R. L. MERRICK. 1987. Eumetopias jubatus. Mammalian Species 283, pp1-7, 3 figs. American Society of Mammalogists.
LOUGHLIN, T. R. 2002. Stellers sea lion Eumetopias jubatus. Pp. 1181-1185 in W. F. Perrin, B. Wursig, and J. G. M. Thiewissen, eds. Encyclopedia of marine mammals. Academic Press.
MERRICK, R. L., T. R. LOUGHLIN, G. A. ANTONELIS, AND R. HILL. 1994. Use of satellite-linked telemetry to study Steller sea lions and northern fur seal foraging. Polar Research 13:105-114.
RAUM-SURYAN, K. L., K. W. PITCHER, D. G. CALKINS, J. L. SEASE, AND T. R. LOUGHLIN. 2002. Dispersal, rookery fidelity, and metapopulation structure of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in an increasing and a decreasing population in Alaska. Marine Mammal Science 18:746-764.
PITCHER, K. W., AND D. G. CALKINS. 1981. Reproductive biology of Steller sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska. Journal of Mammalogy 62:599-605.
SEASE, J. L., AND A. E. YORK. 2003. Seasonal distribution of Stellers sea lions at rookeries and haul-out sites in Alaska. Marine Mammal Science 19(4):745-763.
TRITES, A. W., AND C. P. DONNELLY. 2003. The decline of Steller seal lions Eumetopias jubatus in Alaska: a review of the nutritional stress hypothesis. Mammal Review 33(1)3-28. |
| Species Illustrations |

Image credit: NOAA NMML David Rugh |
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