Social behaviour and reproduction . Elephant seals are among the seals that can stay on land for the longest periods of time, as they can stay dry for several consecutive weeks each year. Males arrive in the colonies earlier than the females and fight for control of
harems when they arrive. Large body size confers advantages in fighting, and the agonistic relationships of the bulls gives rise to a dominance hierarchy, with access to harems and activity within harems being determined by rank. The dominant bulls ("harem masters") establish harems of several dozen females. The least successful males have no harems, but they may try to copulate with a harem male's females when the male is not looking. The majority of
primiparous females and a significant proportion of multiparous females mate at sea with roaming males away from harems. An elephant seal must stay in his territory to defend it, which could mean months without eating, having to live on his blubber storage. Two fighting males use their weight and canine teeth against each other. The outcome is rarely fatal, and the defeated bull will flee; however, bulls can suffer severe tears and cuts. Some males can stay ashore for more than three months without food. Males commonly vocalize with a coughing roar that serves in both individual recognition and size assessment. After being born, a newborn will bark or yap and its mother will respond with a high-pitched moan. The newborn begins to suckle immediately. Lactation lasts an average of 23 days. Throughout this period, the female fasts. Newborns weigh about at birth, and reach by the time they are weaned. The mother loses significant weight during this time. Young weaned seals gather in
nurseries until they lose their birth coats. They enter the water to practice swimming, generally starting their apprenticeship in estuaries or ponds. In summer, the elephant seals come ashore to moult. This sometimes happens directly after reproduction.
Feeding and diving Satellite tracking revealed the seals spend very little time on the surface, usually a few minutes for breathing. They dive repeatedly, each time for more than 20 minutes, to hunt their prey—
squid and fish—at depths of . They are the deepest diving air-breathing non-cetaceans and have been recorded at a maximum of in depth. As for the duration, depth and sequence of dives, the southern elephant seal is the best performing seal. In many regards, they exceed even most
cetaceans. These capabilities result from nonstandard physiological adaptations, common to marine mammals, but particularly developed in elephant seals. The coping strategy is based on increased oxygen storage and reduced oxygen consumption. In the ocean, the seals apparently live alone. Most females dive in
pelagic zones for foraging, while males dive in both pelagic and
benthic zones. Individuals will return annually to the same hunting areas. Due to the inaccessibility of their deep-water foraging areas, no comprehensive information has been obtained about their dietary preferences, although some observation of hunting behavior and prey selection has occurred. While hunting in the dark depths, elephant seals seem to locate their prey, at least in part, using vision; the
bioluminescence of some prey animals can facilitate their capture. Elephant seals do not have a developed system of
echolocation in the manner of cetaceans, but their
vibrissae (facial whiskers), which are sensitive to vibrations, are assumed to play a role in search of food. When at the subantarctic or Antarctic coasts, the seals forage largely on deep-sea
cephalopod species such as
Psychroteuthis glacialis, Alluroteuthis antarcticus, Histioteuthis eltaninae, Onykia ingens, Gonatus antarcticus, Martialia hyadesi, Filippovia knipovitchi, and other
molluscs, various fish species, including
lanternfish (i.e.
Electrona spp. and
Gymnoscopelus spp.),
nothothens (i.e. Genera
Lepidonotothen, Pleuragramma, Trematomus, Pagothenia,), Channichthyidsae spp.,
Bathylagidae spp.,
krill (mostly
Euphausia spp.) and other crustaceans, and even
algae.
Predation Weaned pups and juveniles may fall prey to
orcas. Cases where weaned pups have been attacked and killed by
leopard seals (
Hydrurga leptonyx) and
New Zealand sea lions (
Phocarctos hookeri), exclusively small pups in the latter case, have been recorded.
Great white sharks (
Carcharodon carcharias) have hunted elephant seals near
Campbell Island, while bite marks from a
southern sleeper shark (
Somniosus antarcticus) have been found on surviving elephant seals in the
Macquarie Islands. ==Conservation==