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This crabeater seal had the worst and most recent wounds from a leopard seal attack that the team had seen. The wounds showed almost no healing or infection and so they estimated that they were only a day or two old. The two parallel wounds were made by the two upper canine teeth of a leopard seal, and had sliced through the seal’s tough fur covered skin and over one inch into the blubber layer. About a foot to the left of these cuts there is a smaller corresponding wound from the lower jaw of the attacking leopard seal. On the other side of the seal was the fourth and largest wound: 10 inches long and 1.5 inches deep. It is hard to imagine that this seal can survive such an attack but 50% of the crabeater seals that the research team examined had healed scars like these. On the sea ice, near the icebreaker Oden.

Credit to read: Photo by Jeff Peneston (PolarTREC 2008/2009), Courtesy of ARCUS

Photographer: Jeff Peneston
Category: 
Year: 
2008
Program: 
PolarTREC
Region: 
Southern Ocean
Topic: 
File Information
Focal Length: 
6.3mm
File Size: 
1620593
Computed Mime: 
image/jpeg
Max Aperture: 
f/6.6
Height: 
2304
Width: 
3072
Make: 
PENTAX Corporation
Model: 
PENTAX Optio W20
Exposure Time: 
1/80s
ISO: 
64

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