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Wednesday, September 2, 2020

What A 1000-Year-Old Seal Skull Can Say About Climate Change - Smithsonian Magazine

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What A 1000-Year-Old Seal Skull Can Say About Climate Change

Southern elephant seals normally live in the South Atlantic, often as far south as Antarctica. These are young male Southern elephant seals from the South Shetland and Anvers islands, Antarctica. (Daniel Costa / University of California, Santa Cruz under the National Marine Fisheries Service permits (numbers 87-1593 and 87-1851-00) and ACA authorization)
Southern elephant seals normally live in the South Atlantic, often as far south as Antarctica. These are young male Southern elephant seals from the South Shetland and Anvers islands, Antarctica. (Daniel Costa / University of California, Santa Cruz under the National Marine Fisheries Service permits (numbers 87-1593 and 87-1851-00) and ACA authorization)

Once in a while, scientists re-discover an unusual specimen hidden on the shelves of a museum collection. This time, they found a cast of a skull from a Southern elephant seal, Mirounga leonina, which swam upriver to Indiana over 1000 years ago. The cast had been hidden in a drawer of the fossil marine mammals collection at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History since the 1970s.

“I picked it up and realized it was kind of a mystery. It’s from the middle of the continent, which is the last place you’d ever expect to find an elephant seal,” said Dr. Nick Pyenson, the curator of the collection. He and co-lead authors Maria Zicos and Ana Valenzuela-Toro explained how the seal likely swam to the middle of North America in a new study published today in the scientific journal PeerJ.

“We think this animal somehow swam to the Atlantic from the South Atlantic to the North Atlantic and then somehow entered through the Gulf of Mexico to the Mississippi River system,” said Valenzuela-Toro, who is a Ph.D. Candidate at the University of California Santa Cruz and a Peter Buck Predoctoral Fellow at museum. “That’s half a world away from where these seals are normally found.”

Elephant seals are long distance swimmers, sometimes covering paths of 10,000 miles as they hunt for food in the ocean. This specimen is important because it shows that a seal swam even farther than is considered normal for its species. It is an extreme example of the wide variety of behavior scientists could expect to see in in any given elephant seal.

Casting for clues

A seal on rocks in the snow.
By looking to the past, scientists can predict the future of animal behavior as the environment changes. Elephant seals might change their migration paths drastically as a result and appear in unexpected places. The seal above is a young male Southern elephant seal from the South Shetland and Anvers islands, Antarctica. (Luis Hückstädt / University of California, Santa Cruz under the National Marine Fisheries Service permits (numbers 87-1593 and 87-1851-00) and ACA authorization)

Elephant seals have a reputation for randomly ending up in unexpected places. Because seals are mammals, they don’t have gills to filter oxygen from water. This means it’s easier for them to transition from marine water to freshwater. Sometimes a seal will swim up a river and just stay put. The 1000-year-old elephant seal suggests that this fluke behavior has been happening for a long time.

“When you look at organisms, you realize they have a very broad way of doing things. Marine mammals appear to be able to get really far from their main geographic areas,” said Pyenson. “And species that can disperse across far distances are better buffered against sudden changes to their local environment.”

To learn more about the specimen, Valenzuela-Toro, Zicos and Pyenson had to rely solely on morphology — the study of an animal’s physical characteristics to determine its species. They did so by comparing the cast of the skull to more recent specimens in the marine mammals collection.

Diagram of a seal skull.
These are several anatomical views of the elephant seal skull fragment (USNM 375734) collected in Indiana. The specimen is a plaster cast, or replica; the original specimen was destroyed in the 1970s for radiocarbon dating. (Valenzuela-Toro et al. 2020)

“We went to the collection and started taking out elephant seal skulls from drawers. That’s where it clicked for me that this was the cast of a skull from an elephant seal,” said co-author Zicos, who is currently a Ph.D. student at Queen Mary University of London.

By comparing the cast with other specimens from different species, they determined that it represented a male Southern elephant seal. It also had some marks that suggest it may have been butchered by Indigenous people after being found. It seemed unlikely that a complete skull was traded from South America to North America, according to the team. Instead, they argued that the seal likely strayed off its annual migration pattern and swam to Indiana by accident. That explanation aligned with behaviors other scientists have observed seals doing today.

The past is about the future

A seal on a muddy beach.
One Southern elephant seal, Mirounga leonina, somehow swam to Indiana around 1000 years ago. This is a young male Southern elephant seal from the South Shetland and Anvers islands, Antarctica. (Daniel Costa / University of California, Santa Cruz under the National Marine Fisheries Service permits (numbers 87-1593 and 87-1851-00) and ACA authorization)

Both Southern and Northern elephant seals suffered from extreme hunting in the 1800s. Today, they face another obstacle: climate change. But by learning more about the species’ range of behavior in the past, scientists can better predict the many ways they could react to global challenges now.

“Understanding the range of what an animal species is, and historically was, capable of is helpful. Sometimes what we think it can do is just a fragment of its actual possibilities,” said Zicos.

This lost elephant seal symbolizes what can happen when an animal’s actions are on the extreme side of its species’ behavioral range. If some seals were already likely to swim very far upriver and get lost during times with less environmental stress, who knows how many of them might do so under extreme environmental upheaval.

Collections record species behavior

There are countless objects in the museum’s fossil marine mammals collection that represent a wide range of past animal behavior, distribution and anatomy. The Smithsonian’s collection of marine mammals currently includes over 15,000 fossils and casts of specimens from 50 million years ago to present day.

“This specimen is very interesting not only because it shows us particular characteristics of past elephant seals but because it also demonstrates the value of recording, maintaining and improving our museum collections,” said Valenzuela-Toro.

Studying the constantly growing collection can help researchers know more about what might happen in the future.

“Our shared future with other species is about what just happened in a very tangible way and there’s nothing more tangible than having a museum record,” said Pyenson.

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Saving This Rare Whale Skeleton was a Dirty Job
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Abigail Eisenstadt

Abigail Eisenstadt is a Communications Assistant at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. She brings science to the public via the museum's Office of Communications and Public Affairs, where she tracks media coverage, coordinates filming activities, and writes for the museum’s blog, Smithsonian Voices. Abigail received her master's in science journalism from Boston University. In her free time, she is either outdoors or in the kitchen.

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