Ribbon seal - Histriophoca fasciata

Taxonomy & Nomenclature

Scientific Name Histriophoca fasciata
Author (Zimmermann, 1783)
Taxonomic Rank Species
Taxonomic # 622021
Common Names English: Ribbon Seal
Current Standing valid
Taxonomic Parents Kingdom: Animalia
  Phylum: Chordata
    Subphylum: Vertebrata
      Class: Mammalia
        Subclass: Theria
          Infraclass: Eutheria
            Order: Carnivora
              Suborder: Caniformia
                Family: Phocidae
                  Genus: Histriophoca
Taxonomic Children
Synonyms (since 1950)

Taxonomic data is courtesy of the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS)
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Physical Description / Field Identification

Ribbon seals have the most striking color pattern found on any seal. Adults of both sexes have pale bands of variable width that encircle each foreflipper, the neck and nape, and the hip area. The bands have sharply defined edges and vary greatly in width. On some animals, the bands are so wide that they merge. Band color ranges from a shade just paler than the surrounding dark pelage to white. Adult males are black to brownish black, while females are light to dark brown. The bands are less distinct on females and subadults. Juveniles are plain looking until they are about two years old and lack the dramatic markings that will characterize them as adults. They are gray to light brown after molting the woolly whitish lanugo or birth coat at an age of about five weeks.

Ribbon seals are more slender than other Bering Sea ice seals. The head is small, relatively wide, and flat topped. The forehead is small in profile. The close-set eyes appear large. The muzzle is short, blunt, and slightly tapering. The nostrils are also small and terminal, forming a “V” pattern that converges at the bottom. The vibrissae are light-colored, beaded, and fairly prominent. There are long, hooked claws on all digits of the foreflippers. The ends of the foreflippers are weakly pointed with a somewhat longer first or outer digit and successively shorter digits 2-5.

The dental formula is I 3/2, C 1/1, PC 5/5.

Adult ribbon seals reach a maximum length of about 1.8 m and weights of 90-148 kg. Pups are approximately 86 cm long and 10.5 kg at birth.

Can be Confused With

Four other phocids: ringed, harbor, spotted, and bearded seals share the range of the ribbon seal. Look for details of pelage markings and coloration, particularly the presence of markings (other than the four obvious wide pale bands on adult-sized seals) such as spots, blotches, or large numbers of rings, all of which are absent in ribbon seals. This also includes the smaller plain gray juvenile stage. Also, note overall size, relative size of the head and muzzle, foreflipper shape (squared off at the end in the bearded seal), and mystacial vibrissae density. The bearded seal has a much greater density of downward curving vibrissae than the ribbon seal, and all other northern phocids.

Distribution

Ribbon seal distribution most closely matches that of the spotted seal. They occur in the Seas of Okhotsk and Japan, the western North Pacific, and from the Bering Sea northward through the Chukchi Sea east to the western Beaufort and west to about 180° longitude.

Three separate populations of ribbon seals have been proposed and include the southern and northern Sea of Okhotsk, and the Bering Sea breeding groups. Ribbon seals inhabit the southern edge of the pack ice from winter to early summer. Most are thought to be pelagic in the Bering Sea during the summer. Records from the North Pacific south of the Aleutians suggest a possibly wider range during the summer when ribbon seals are not associated with sea ice. A stranding from central California is evidence of occasional distant wanderings.

Ecology and Behavior

Ribbon seals are solitary for much of their lives. Pups are born on ice floes from early April to early May. Broken pack ice is preferred over solid ice sheets and highly concentrated pack ice, as ribbon seals can only open and maintain access holes in ice up to approximately 15 cm thick. Males are generally nowhere to be seen during the nursing period. Ribbon seals are able to move rapidly on ice, using slashing side-to-side motions. They also extend their necks to peer at sources of disturbance, but are fairly approachable by boat. They are rarely encountered, because of the remote and inhospitable nature of their polar habitat.

Feeding and Prey

Diet varies by area and age of the seal. Ribbon seals in the Okhotsk and Bering seas are known to take 35 different species of fish and invertebrates. Young ribbon seals feed on euphausiids after weaning and until about age one when they switch to feed predominantly on shrimp for a year. As two-year-olds they take up the adult diet, which includes a variety of fishes, squids, and octopuses. Russian scientists have determined that ribbon seals in the Sea of Okhotsk have a diet that is 65% pollock, while those in the Bering Sea consume about the same percentage of squid and octopuses.

Threats and Status

Commercial hunting was carried out in the Sea of Okhotsk and Bering Sea from the middle to the late 20th century. Subsistence hunting by Alaskan Natives occurs at low levels in the United States. Global warming, accumulation of contaminants, entanglements in commercial fisheries and depletion of prey species such as pollock in commercial fisheries are all on-going threats and concerns.

Links

References

Burns, J.J. 1981. Ribbon seal - Phoca fasciata Zimmerman, 1783. pp. 89-109 in S.H. Ridgway and R. Harrison (eds.), Handbook of Marine Mammals, Vol. 2: Seals. Academic Press.

Fedoseev, G. 2002. Ribbon Seal Histriophoca fasciata. pp. 1027-1030 in W.F. Perrin, B. Würsig and J.G.M. Thiewissen (eds.), Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals. Academic Press.

King, J.E. 1983. Seals of the world. Second Edition. British Museum (Natural History), Comstock Publishing Associates, and Cornell University Press. 240 pp.

ITIS TSN622021
Status - ESA, U.S. FWS
    -
Status - Red List, IUCN
    LC (Global)
#records (spatial)6
#records (non-spatial)0
#datasets4
Year1960 - 2013
Latitude63.69 - 69.88
Longitude-170.48 - -122.79
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