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San
Nicolas Island, our location, is outer-most in the Channel Island
chain, located about 60 miles offshore from Ventura County, California.
It's only 22 square miles, but accommodates tens of thousands of
animals and four different species of pinnipeds during their most
vulnerable times - breeding, birthing and molting seasons. We have
timed our trip to coincide with the arrival of Northern elephant
seals onto the beaches. Dr. Brent Stewart and Dr. Pam Yochem have
been studying these animals since 1979 and acted as our guides as
well as experts during this trip. We learned that just 100 years
ago, elephant seals almost disappeared for good, after utilizing
these islands for at least 500,000 years. Sealers and other hunters
killed these unsuspecting elephant seals for oil and food, with
museum scientists shooting seven of the last eight found on island
colonies in Baja California in 1892. Luckily, there were a few left
elsewhere to carry on the species, and today thanks to protection
from hunting, they are back - in the incredible numbers we found
before us on San Nicolas Island.
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Jack
and Dr. Pam Yochem watch as Dr. Stewart speaks
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