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Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) home page | Sponsored by Welsh Assembly Government

Countryside Council for Wales
Landscape & wildlife

Seals

Worldwide, 32 species of seal have survived the twists and turns of evolution to the present day.  They share a common genetic record that suggests they  have lived in our seas for about 27 million years, being descended from a land-based carnivore, similar to a giant otter.  

Only two species of seal live on the Welsh coasts – the grey seal and the common seal.  You can tell them apart by their size, head shape and colour.

Grey seals

Nearly 40% (about 125,000) of the world population of grey seals is found in the British Isles, with a relatively stable population of about 6,000 in Wales.  Grey seals can be huge, with males growing to over 2 metres in length and weighing up to 330kg. They have large Roman noses - in fact, their scientific name - Halichoerus grypus - actually means 'sea-pig with a hooked nose'.  They are usually dark grey or brown, often with blotches. The pups have soft white fur. 

Common seals

The common seal is quite rare in Wales.  These animals are smaller than the grey seal and have more rounded dog-like faces. Their colour varies from pale to dark grey, often with dark spots or rings.

Underwater

On land, seals may look awkward and clumsy, but they are extremely agile and graceful underwater, where a duvet of blubber about 5 centimetres thick (in a healthy seal) keeps them warm.  Their body temperature is almost the same as that of a human being. 

Being mammals, seals need to hold their breath underwater, but rather than descending with lungs full of air as human divers do, seals expel air before they submerge. 

Their blood stores more oxygen than human blood which reduces buoyancy and the risk of the bends (a common problem for human divers, where nitrogen bubbles form in the blood as pressure falls too quickly). 

This oxygen store in the blood allows them to make foraging dives of up to about 8 minutes.  At rest, including while asleep, they may remain submerged for up to 13 minutes. 

Many seals regularly dive to 50 metres but may dive to much greater depths.

Another helpful adaptation to underwater life is the seal's ability to regulate its heartbeat in a process called bradycardia.  While at the surface, a seal's heart may beat at a rate of about 120 beats per minute as they rapidly expel the waste products of respiration (carbon dioxide) and take in more oxygen.  Underwater, the seal's heartbeat drops to about 40 beats per minute, which allows them to maximise the time spent under the surface catching fish.

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