Northern elephant seals breed and give birth in California (U.S.) and Baja California (Mexico), primarily on offshore islands from December to March. Males feed near the eastern Aleutian Islands and in the Gulf of Alaska, and females feed further south, in the offshore waters of Washington and Oregon. Adults return to land between March and August to molt, with males returning later than females. Adults return to their feeding areas again between the spring/summer molt and the winter breeding season. Populations of northern elephant seals in the U.S. and Mexico were all originally derived from a few hundred individuals surviving in Mexico after being nearly hunted to extinction for their blubber which was melted down for fine grade machine oil. Adult males grow to 4 m in length and are reported to weigh as much as 2000 kg, the much smaller females are up to 3 meters and 600 kg. Pups are nursed for about a month and can gain as much as 165 kg in that time.
- NOREN, D. P.
2002. Thermoregulation of weaned northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris) pups in air and water. Physiol. Biochem. Zool. 75(5):513-523.
- STEWART, B. S., and R. L. DeLONG.
1995. Double migrations of the northern elephant seals. J. Mammal. 76(1):196-205.
- STEWART, B. S., P. K. YOCHEM, H. R. HUBER, R. L. DeLONG, R. J. JAMESON, W. J. SYDEMAN, S. G. ALLEN, and B. J. LE BOEUF.
1994. History and present status of the northern elephant seal population. Pages 29-48 In B. J. LeBoeuf and R. M. Laws (editors), Elephant seals: Population ecology, behavior, and physiology. Univ. California Press.
- STEWART, B. S., and R. L. DeLONG.
1994. Postbreeding foraging migrations of northern elephant seals. Pages 290-309 In B. J. Le Boeuf and R. M. Laws (editors), Elephant seals: Population ecology, behavior, and physiology. Univ. California Press.
- Search the AFSC database for additional Northern Elephant Seal publications