What is the monk's seal?
Monk Seal is a seal in the family monachus . There are three known species in this family; Two types of monk seals are endangered and one extinct. Scientists who work with monk seals are afraid that they can completely disappear without intervention because they are critically endangered by different factors, from human intervention to disease. Unlike most seals, the monk seal is a tropical seal that favors mild than warm water. As with other ears seals, the sea gasket, which is specially adapted to a high water life, has a tendency to be cumbersome on Earth. Their bodies are elegant and lean back with strong fins adapted to long -distance swimming and are covered in the coat of soft insulating hair, which prevents their skin saturated while in the water.
The common name "Monk Seal" is a reference to skin folds on the neck of these seals, which really resembles the folds of the Munich hood. Monda seals come in a wide range of colors, including brown, cream and gray, with browni by monk's seals
Living Monk Seals can be found in two places: Hawaii and Mediterranean. The Munich seal is critically endangered and the population was last counted in hundreds. These seals were threatened by human activities in the Mediterranean, including fishing, construction and industrial production, and were also affected by a disease that was estimated in 1997 by estimated two -thirds of the population.
The Hawaiian Monk seals are not critically endangered, but are still considered endangered due to increased predation, aggressive fishing around the Hawaiian islands and human activity. The population of Moka in Hawaii has become so emphasized that cases of "mobbing" have been observed in which a group of men chases one woman, sometimes killing or seriously hurting her.
The extinct species of the monk seal is the Caribbean or the West Indian monk seal, which was last seen in 1952.