Morphological and molecular evidence supports a
monophyletic origin of pinnipeds, sharing a common ancestor with
Musteloidea, though an earlier hypothesis suggested that Otаriidae are descended from a
common ancestor most closely related to modern
bears. Debate remains as to whether the phocids diverged from the otariids before or after the walrus. Otariids arose in the
Miocene (15–17 million years ago) in the North Pacific, diversifying rapidly into the Southern Hemisphere, where most species now live. The earliest known fossil otariid is
Eotaria crypta from southern California, while the genus
Callorhinus (
northern fur seal) has the oldest fossil record of any living otariid, extending to the middle Pliocene. It probably arose from the extinct fur seal genus
Thalassoleon. Traditionally, otariids had been subdivided into the fur seal (Arctocephalinae) and sea lion (Otariinae) subfamilies, with the major distinction between them being the presence of a thick underfur layer in the former. Under this categorization, the fur seals comprised two genera:
Callorhinus in the North Pacific with a single representative, the northern fur seal (
C. ursinus), and eight species in the Southern Hemisphere under the genus
Arctocephalus; while the sea lions comprise five species under five genera. ==Anatomy==