PESCADERO, Calif. — Researchers tracking elephant seals off the Northern California coast say they have discovered the animals travel much farther than once thought.
The University of California, Santa Cruz, researchers last year found two elephant seals had crossed the international dateline, putting them closer to Russia than the United States, Patrick Robinson with UC Santa Cruz’s Ano Nuevo Natural Reserve, told the San Jose Mercury News in a story on Sunday.
Male elephant seals spend much of their time in the northern Pacific, off the coast of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. Females tend to hunt in the northeast Pacific.
They return to Ano Nuevo in San Mateo County and other spots on the California coast each winter to breed.