Diet
Northern fur seal diet is well known from stomach content and fecal
material analysis throughout their range in the Bering Sea and North
Pacific Ocean. Fur seals eat a wide variety of small schooling fishes
and squids. Diet composition varies between the six major breeding
islands and changes during their annual migration. Sixty-three species
of fishes and squids have been identified throughout their range.
In the Bering Sea, fur seals primarily consume walleye pollock,
squids, salmon, Pacific sandlance, northern smoothtongue and Pacific
herring. Between Alaska and California the primary prey species
are northern anchovy, Pacific herring, squids, capelin, Pacific
sandlance, Pacific whiting, salmon, Pacific saury and rockfishes.
Feeding Patterns
Northern fur seals are carnivores that feed primarily at night. From
dusk until dawn, fishes and squids are near the ocean’s surface
where they are easily captured by fur seals. During the breeding
season, fur seals can travel distances ranging from 350 – 1000
km at sea, and dive to depths reaching 200 meters to search for
food. Three types of diving patterns are exhibited by fur seals:
shallow, deep and mixed diving. Over the continental shelf (<200
m deep) deep divers feed throughout the day and night on fish found
throughout the water column. In oceanic waters off the continental
shelf (3000 m deep) shallow nighttime divers feed on fish and squids
found in the upper 50 m of the water column. Mixed divers tend
to feed along the continental shelf edge and display both diving
patterns. Fur seals don’t chew their food;
they swallow it in large chunks.