Article JZ06 Five near-blind monk seals become ambassadors for vanishing species

Five near-blind monk seals become ambassadors for vanishing species

by
Jeremy Hance
from on (#JZ06)

For the first time, Hawaiian monk seals are on public display outside of the Aloha State. Conservationists hope the new ambassadors at the Minnesota Zoo will help bring more attention (and funds) to the endangered, declining species

The Hawaiians call their monk seals ilio-holo-i-ka-uaua or "the dog that runs in rough water," but when I see my first one, I think: whoa, that's more like a bear. And indeed, a female Hawaiian monk seal weighs up to 240 kilograms - about the size of a Eurasian brown bear. Although the Hawaiian monk seals are clearly powerful, hefty animals - twice as heavy as an English mastiff - their wide, black, velvety eyes make them hard to resist. And I find myself quickly enamoured.

You may think I'm on a Hawaiian beach soaking up the sun when I see my first living, breathing monk seals, but I'm not. I'm thousands of miles away in the cold, landlocked Midwest at a press event a few days before the public debut of five female seals at the Minnesota Zoo. It's a landmark debut: these are the first Hawaiian monk seals on public display outside of the Aloha State.

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