In mammals, vagrancy has been recorded for
bats, pinnipeds (seals), beluga
whales,
manatees, cougars, and more. Migrating bats may be blown off course during unfavorable winds or extreme weather events. Nomadic Antarctic and sub-Antarctic seal species have been observed in temperate islands in the South Atlantic Ocean. Leopard Seals which breed on Antarctic ice banks have been seen as north as Gough Island () and Tristan da Cunha (). Male beluga whales, which breed in the Arctic circle, may turn up as vagrant groups in sub-Arctic waters, with one sole vagrant reported further south off the shore of Baja California, Mexico. Manatee vagrants from small, localized Puerto Rican populations have been observed on several occasions in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Manatees are known to travel long distances to repeat locations, suggesting preference for particular foraging sites. Rarer examples come from individuals traveling from Florida to the northeastern United States. One manatee, named "Chessie," made repeated northward journeys for several summers, possibly indicating destination-directed vagrancy. More examples of transoceanic vagrancy have occurred in small-bodied mammals. At least one instance of mole, shrew, monkey, civet, lemur, and rat vagrants have been demonstrated relocating to new continents via vegetation mats or uprooted tree rafts. Relocation this way, while rare, is possible when individuals lower metabolic activity, allowing them to survive harsh maritime conditions with little food or water. == Reptiles ==