These seals go to rest on the coasts. When looking for food, they dive up to 40 meters deep and prey on fish and octopus. During the breeding season, the males establish strictly guarded
territories on the coasts and try to gain a harem from several females. They feed on fish and mollusks. They are very sociable and are found in large groups, on cliffs, coasts, and even on human constructions, such as piers and navigation bowls.
Reproduction Unlike fur seals (
Arctocephalus) which live in well-structured social groups, the species of the genus
Zalophus form variable groups lacking in organization, although the males are also territorial and usually form
harems of about fifteen females each. Males make loud sounds to mark territory. They usually
mate between May and January depending on the species. Females give birth to only one young, which is born on land or water after a gestation that lasts between 342 and 365 days. They are the only mammals whose milk does not contain lactose. Females wean their young after 11 to 12 months, but some nurse their one-year-old pups alongside their newborns. File:Galápagos sea lions Isabela.jpg| A pair of Galápagos sea lions (Zalophus wollebaeki) on Isabela Island, Galapagos Islands. Photographed in the early morning. File:Californian Sea Lions (16141829839).jpg| California Sea lions at Santa Cruz, California File:Zalophus californianus swimming past fish, Guadalupe Island, Mexico (14917375665).jpg| California Sea lions (
Zalophus californianus) swimming past fish, Guadalupe Island, Mexico ==References==