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Ocean Watch

Susan Scott


San Francisco
sea lions put on
‘wrestling’ exhibition

I spent this week in San Francisco, a city loaded with world-class museums, unusual shops and charming neighborhoods. So what was the first thing I did? I went to a wrestling match and watched a bunch of macho males pretend to fight.

This isn't usually my idea of a good time, but these weren't your typical wrestlers. Unlike the professional fighters of WWE (World Wrestling Entertainment), the performers I saw at Fisherman's Wharf couldn't care less about having an audience.

That's because they were male sea lions, which focus on two things: females and fish.

The sea lions that hang out around San Francisco's Pier 39 are mostly young males who, between naps, spar for space on the floating docks.

These clashes look vicious, but like TV wrestling, these immature males aren't trying to hurt each other. They're just practicing for the day when they will try to hurt each other. California sea lion bulls, which can weigh up to 850 pounds, fight in breeding grounds called rookeries to win beachside harems.

Most of the males hanging out at Fisherman's Wharf are still small and resemble females, which grow to about 250 pounds. But a few of the older, larger bulls are there, too.

When a young male tries to jump onto a float owned by one of these bruisers, everybody knows it. With a lunge of his massive head, the roaring bull usually sends the youngster crashing back to the water. During this commotion, other challengers try to board the pier from different sides, causing the big bull to rush to the defense.

Just like at ringside, spectators cheer for their favorites during these skirmishes.

Males begin arriving at Pier 39 in August after the summer breeding season is over. Their numbers peak to about 1,000 in January, and the docks float low under piles of snoozing sea lions. Come June, they leave, most to the main rookery about 370 miles away in the Channel Islands, to fight for females.

Sea lions didn't always hang out at Fisherman's Wharf. A few months after San Francisco's devastating 1989 earthquake, six pioneer sea lions hauled out on a section of Pier 39. By 1990 about 150 males had taken over the docks there. Since federal law protects sea lions, that was that.

Sea lions like resting on floating docks because on a beach the animals have to move with the changing tides. Here the docks do the moving.

Some people think the earthquake scared the sea lions away from their previous haul-out spot, called Seal Rock, just outside San Francisco Bay. Others believe the abundance of herring, sea lions' main food, in the bay attracted them to the human-made docks.

During the winter, herring enter the bay in large schools to lay their eggs.

As you might expect, a bunch of loud, smelly animals taking up boat slips was not a welcome phenomenon here. But when the colony started attracting tourists, the city saw these colorful animals in a whole new light.

Today, the sea lions have ample food, good accommodations and even health care. Workers from the local Marine Mammal Center monitor the colony daily, taking care of those sick, injured or entangled.

In return, these testosterone-loaded males' mock-fights draw about 10 million visitors a year.

WWE should consider featuring sea lions.



See the Columnists section for some past articles.

Marine science writer Susan Scott can be reached at http://www.susanscott.net.

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