Tag Archives: sealion
Sealion infusion
Wardens’s report by Garry Fletcher contd.
In early morning calm –and clear with no wind– by 1115 hrs it was pouring rain. Predictable from the look of the barometer . The weather fluctuated all day from rain to sun with a rainbow and back to rain. Sea lion numbers are still building and one more elephant seal joined the elephant seal group by the boathouse last night . So this is what it looked and sounded like this morning :
Several branded sealions here today:
At this time of year there are some non-breeding plumage Heermann’s gulls that one can pick out among the large gull population .
And a gallery of some of the other bird-life on the island, some migrating through.
9 whalewatching boats through the reserve this morning. Swells and the approaching storm held them off in the afternoon.
The panoramas below were taken in the last two days:
On Sunday morning, the Davis weather instrument wasn’t working. On checking, I found that the UPC powerbackup was malfunctioning–will return it to the college IT dept. Weather is back on now.
Whale watchers abundant today
Wardens’s report by Garry Fletcher: Chris drove me out this morning to Race Rocks to relieve Courtney our Ecoguardian for the weekend –a foggy start but it cleared off by noon with a shower in the afternoon. Up the tower at 11:30 for census and the daily boat survey for DFO. Census from tower at 1150hrs. Harbour seals : 22 SE onshore, 39 SW : total 61 Elephant Seals: 10 in a cluster behind boathouse: total 10. California Sea Lions 77 south side, 80 on East shore , 40 on NE , viewed from Docks and helipad to get ones not visible from tower: from docks w side 40, East 72, west shore tidepools: 53 : total 362. Northern Sea lions: middle rock 170, E side docks 30, N rock 50 : total 250
The distribution in the late afternoon changed, with more sealions of both species moving up onto the main island covering the yard to the North west which is now completely devoid of vegetation.
In order to curb damage to the grounds, (and pipes and conduits,) from the sealions this year, we are restricting the movement up onto the center of the island. A network of electrical tape has been installed and it appears to be effective so far.
For other branding records see: https://www.racerocks.ca/race-rocks-animals-plants/marine-mammal-tracking/
I was surprised by the number of dead juvenile seagull carcases around the island. many were young that were probably attacked by other adults when out of nesting territories , the highest count was on the ledge below Camera5 . Most deaths occurred during the late summer. Approx count 20.
Twice today a pod of Orca, ( about 6 ?) traveled through the reserve. whale watchers numbered up to 10 boats averaging 15-20 people per boat. They were observant about remaining outside the reserve when the whales were inside reserve boundaries, but with a ring of whale-watching boats around the group when they were out in Race Passage, it did not look like the whales were getting much freedom. I believe the Orca pod was feeding on fish because there were many seals and sea lions in the water and none were attacked. At least 20 whale-watching boats were through the reserve today.
At the northeast corner of the helipad I noticed a large amount of chevrons from chiton shells, washed out from guano deposits from over the summer. It seemed to be a very dense concentration??
Environment Canada has over the summer installed new weather sensors on top of the tower at Race Rocks. Now in addition to wind speed and direction, humidity, temperature, dew point and barometric pressure are recorded. This provides an interesting comparison with the data from the ground level recorded by our Davis weather instrument: They may be accessed here: Env Canada Weather
A bit of History:
One can often encounter human-made artifacts on the islands which don’t have an obvious explanation: On the east side of the tower for instance is this “sidewalk to nowhere”. Trev Anderson told me about the wooden blacksmith shop that was located in that spot until it was demolished in the late 1960’s.
rain
clear all day, 1600 rain started
-photographed branded sea lions
-set up sea lion fence along jetty
beautiful windy day
25-30 kt West wind since 1400 hrs
-6 elephant seals came ashore and napped behind the boat shed
-9 pelicans flew over, north to south. It seems like they pause over the islands and rest in the updrafts before crossing towards Port Angeles
-The sealions have occupied the whole area between the jetty and boat shed, the derrick shed, and the North-East flats
Off island from 1300 to 1500 hrs
New voltmeter courtesy of Erik
-ran desalinator
-washed solar panels
-found a couple small hose leaks
lightning!
!!!Thunder and lightning!!!
Both Environment Canada and the Washington Marine text forecasts were spot on for the weather today. Fog and W 15 kts in the morning, W 20 kts off-and-on rain by midday, and W 30 kts and raining by evening.
There were a few sport fisherman out at 1135 during my boat count (7), but most were heading back to port.
8 marine tour boats, all before noon
9 oyster catchers
8 Canada geese
Lot’s of porpoising by sealions in the currents
One sealion by the derrick shed with an injured flipper
The elephant seal showed up and spent a few hours next to the jetty
Maintenance:
-ran desalinator
-photographed branded sealions for our contact at NOAA
-washed outside windows of main house with telescoping pole
-drained and rough-scrubbed the rainwater tank
-used a broom and the rain to scrub the main house porches
-inventoried first aid kit
end of calm weather
No recreational fishing effort count this morning due to fog
Fog cleared mid-day, and is now blowing back in with the help of 30 kt winds
High tides in the evening mean that nearly all the reserve sealions are camped outside the main house and near the jetty
There are now 8 Canada geese on the island making a mess of things.
Maintenance:
- Ran desalinator and fixed leak on high pressure dial
- Cleaned solar panels
- Cleared debris and tidied up around buildings
- Wrote an SOP for water sampling
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Off island yesterday from 1200 to 1700 for Pearson College paperwork and orientation. Returned in time for evening water sampling. 3 marine mammal tour boats were watching sealions on the jetty when I returned. Perfect, glassy water all day.
September 8/13
Morning Weather: winds West 6kts, seas Rppl, Fog all around
Chris off station between 1100-1730hrs
marine traffic: eco-tour boats: 3
marina mammal count: west rock: 4 sealions , 3 seals, middle rocks: 142 sealions, 52 seals, north rock: 42 seals, Great Race Rocks (including east islets): 350 sealions, 65 seals
solar panels cleaned.
Sealion numbers building
Pam from the UK using the remote cameras has noted the increase of sealions on her Flickr site;
http://www.flickr.com/photos/66339356@N00/sets/72157632533500094/page3/
A week of visitors!
On Thursday we had a visit from Discovery Channel who were working with the Ogden Point Dive Centre (based out of Victoria) to film and document sea lions and seals on the reserve. They asked questions about the sea lions’ migration patterns and the role of Race Rocks as a reserve among others. The footage will be used as part of The Blue Realm series, by Danny Mauro.
The California sea lions moved onto the main Rock last week, and the Stellars have joined in the last few days. Currently, approximately 30 are resting on the rock and in the water. Misery, our largest resident male, left last week and has not returned or been spotted on the other rocks. The female in the last post has also left. However, on Saturday, a different young female was resting on the jetty. Unfortunately, I did not notice she had a tag on her back fin until she was swimming away and it was too late to mark down.