Saimaa Ringed Seal
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Conservation status: Critical
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Phoca hispida saimensis |
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The Saimaa Ringed Seal (Phoca hispida saimensis, saimaannorppa in Finnish) is a subspecies of Ringed Seal (Phoca hispida) . They are among the most endangered seals in the world, having a total population of only about 270 individuals. The only existing population of these seals is found in Lake Saimaa, Finland (hence the name).
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[edit] Appearance
An adult saimaa ringed seal is between 85 and 160 cm in length and weighs between 40 and 90 kg; males usually being larger than females. They are coloured dark gray, with a gray-black dorsal with circular white rings. The bottom is light gray. The saimaa ringed seal is darker in color than other ringed seals.
[edit] Reproduction
Saimaa ringed seals become mature between the ages of 3 and 7. Their pregnancy rate is between 80 and 95 percent. Ringed seals' gestation lasts 11 months. Their pups are between 55 and 65 cm, and 4 to 5 kg at birth. The Saimaa ringed seals' longetivity is just over 20 years. With the current population level, between 30 and 60 (65 in 2004) pups are born every year.
[edit] Conservation
The Saimaa ringed seal has been protected singe 1955. In 1983, the population was between 100 and 150 seals. In 2005, it is about 270. It is thought that the immediate threat of extinction would be alleviated if the population grew to over 400 individuals.
In order to protect the Saimaa ringed seal, fisheries have been banned from their living areas. Also, it is forbidden for unauthorised people to go to the islands where these seals live.
The Saimaa ringed seal lives nowadays mainly in two Finnish national parks, Kolovesi and Linnansaari
[edit] Trivia
The Saimaa Ringed Seal features prominently in the popular Finnish song "Vanhoja poikia viiksekkäitä" by Juha Vainio. The melancholy song tells the story of two "old men with whiskers", one an elderly bachelor living in a humble cottage on an island, the other the seal that lives nearby. The profoundly sad, pessimistic lyrics of the song end with the grim forecast that both seal and man are destined to be the last of their kind.
This seal, along with the ladoga seal and the baikal seal, is the only living seal to live its life entirely in freshwater.