Using data received from
transmitters called satellite-linked depth recorders (SLDRs) and time-depth recorders (TDRs), which are attached to the seals' heads by scientists, it was determined that leopard seals are primarily shallow divers, but capable of diving deeper than in search for food. They are able to complete these dives by collapsing their lungs and re-inflating them at the surface. This is possible by increasing the amount of
surfactants which coats the
alveoli in the lungs for re-inflation. They also have a reinforced
trachea to prevent collapse at great depth pressures. These seals feed on a wide variety of creatures; young leopard seals usually eat mostly
krill, squid, and
fish. Adults are able to take on more difficult but substantial prey, famously including
emperor,
king,
rockhopper,
Adélie,
gentoo, and
chinstrap penguins, though they also prey on other seal species such as
Weddell,
crabeater,
Ross, young
southern elephant seals, and
fur seal pups. Research shows that on average, the
aerobic dive-limit for juvenile seals is around 7 minutes, which means that during the winter months juvenile leopard seals do not eat krill, which is a major part of older seals' diets, since krill is found deeper during this time. This might occasionally lead to co-operative hunting. Co-operative hunting of leopard seals on Antarctic fur seal pups has been witnessed, which could be a mother helping her older pup, or could also be female-male couple-interactions, to increase their hunting-productivity. Around the sub-Antarctic
island of South Georgia, the
Antarctic fur seal (
Arctocephalus gazella) is the main prey.
Antarctic krill (
Euphasia superba),
southern elephant seal pups and
petrels such as the
diving petrel (
Pelecanoides) and the
cape petrel (
Daption) have also been taken as prey. Vagrant leopard seals in
New Zealand have been observed preying on
chondrichthyans: elephantfish (
Callorhinchus milii),
ghost sharks, and
spiny dogfish were recorded as prey items. Additionally, this population of leopard seals and those in
Australia were noted to bear wounds from
chimaeriforms and
stingrays respectively. When hunting penguins, the leopard seal patrols the waters near the edges of the ice, almost completely submerged while waiting for the birds to enter the ocean. It kills the swimming bird by grabbing the feet, then shaking the penguin vigorously and beating its body against the surface of the water repeatedly until the penguin is dead. Previous reports stating that the leopard seal
skins its prey before feeding have been found to be incorrect. Lacking the teeth necessary to slice its prey into manageable pieces, it flails its prey from side to side tearing and ripping it into smaller pieces. Krill is eaten by
suction, and
strained through the seal's teeth, allowing leopard seals to switch to different feeding styles. Such generalization and adaptations may be responsible for the seal's success in the challenging Antarctic ecosystem. The only natural predator of leopard seals is the
orca.
Acoustic behavior Leopard seals are very vocal underwater during the austral summer. While singing the seal hangs upside down and rocks from side to side under the water. Their back is bent, the neck and cranial thoracic region (the chest) is inflated and as they call their chest pulses. The male calls can be split into two categories: vocalizing and silencing; vocalizing is when they are making noises underwater, and silencing noted as the breathing period at the air surface. Adult male leopard seals have only a few stylized calls, some are like bird or
cricket-like
trills yet others are low haunting
moans. Scientists have identified five distinctive sounds that male leopard seals make, which include: the high double trill, medium single trill, low descending trill, low double trill, and a hoot with a single low trill. These cadences of calls are believed to be a part of a long range acoustic display for territorial purposes, or to attract a potential mate. Each male leopard seal produces these individual calls, and can arrange their few call types into individually distinctive sequences (or songs). The acoustic behavior of the leopard seal is believed to be linked to their breeding behaviour. In male seals, vocalizing coincides with the timing of their
breeding season, which falls between November and the first week of January; captive female seals vocalize when they have elevated
reproductive hormones. Since leopard seals live in an area difficult for humans to survive in, not much is known on their reproduction and breeding habits. However, it is known that their breeding system is
polygynous, meaning that males mate with multiple females during the mating period. Females reach
sexual maturity between the ages of three and seven, and can give birth to a single pup during the summer on the floating ice floes of the Antarctic pack ice; males reach sexual maturity around the age of six or seven years. In preparation for the pups, the females dig a circular hole in the ice as a home for the pup. A newborn pup weighs around and are usually with their mother for a month, before they are
weaned off. The male leopard seal does not participate in childcare, and returns to its solitary lifestyle after the breeding season. Five research voyages were made to Antarctica in 1985, 1987 and 1997–1999 to survey leopard seals. ==Relationships with humans==