fbpx
Wikipedia

Steller's sea cow

Steller's sea cow (Hydrodamalis gigas) is an extinct sirenian described by Georg Wilhelm Steller in 1741. At that time, it was found only around the Commander Islands in the Bering Sea between Alaska and Russia; its range extended across the North Pacific during the Pleistocene epoch, and likely contracted to such an extreme degree due to the glacial cycle. It is possible indigenous populations interacted with the animal before Europeans. Steller first encountered it on Vitus Bering's Great Northern Expedition when the crew became shipwrecked on Bering Island. Much of what is known about its behavior comes from Steller's observations on the island, documented in his posthumous publication On the Beasts of the Sea. Within 27 years of its discovery by Europeans, the slow-moving and easily-caught mammal was hunted into extinction for its meat, fat, and hide.

Steller's sea cow
Temporal range: PleistoceneC. E. 1768
Skeleton at the Finnish Museum of Natural History

Extinct (1768) (IUCN 3.1)[1]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Sirenia
Family: Dugongidae
Genus: Hydrodamalis
Species:
H. gigas
Binomial name
Hydrodamalis gigas
(Zimmermann, 1780)
Map showing the position of the Commander Islands to the east of Kamchatka. The larger island to the west is Bering Island; the smaller island to the east is Copper Island.
Synonyms[2][3][4][5]
List of synonyms

Some 18th-century adults would have reached weights of 8–10 t (8.8–11.0 short tons) and lengths up to 9 m (30 ft). It was a member of the family Dugongidae, of which the 3 m (9.8 ft) long dugong (Dugong dugon) is the sole living member. It had a thicker layer of blubber than other members of the order, an adaptation to the cold waters of its environment. Its tail was forked, like that of whales or dugongs. Lacking true teeth, it had an array of white bristles on its upper lip and two keratinous plates within its mouth for chewing. It fed mainly on kelp, and communicated with sighs and snorting sounds. Steller believed it was a monogamous and social animal living in small family groups and raising its young, similar to modern sirenians.

Description edit

 
The skull of a Steller's sea cow, Natural History Museum of London

Steller's sea cows are reported to have grown to 8 to 9 m (26 to 30 ft) long as adults, much larger than extant sirenians.[6] In 1987, a rather complete skeleton was found on Bering Island measuring 3 m (9.8 ft).[7][8] In 2017, another such skeleton was found on Bering Island measuring 5.2 m (17 ft), and in life probably about 6 m (20 ft).[9] Georg Steller's writings contain two contradictory estimates of weight: 4 and 24.3 t (4.4 and 26.8 short tons). The true value is estimated to fall between these figures, at about 8–10 t (8.8–11.0 short tons).[10] This size made the sea cow one of the largest mammals of the Holocene epoch, along with baleen whales and some few tooth whales,[11] and was likely an adaptation to reduce its surface-area to volume ratio and conserve heat.[12]

Unlike other sirenians, Steller's sea cow was positively buoyant, meaning that it was unable to submerge completely. It had a very thick outer skin, 2.5 cm (1 in), to prevent injury from sharp rocks and ice and possibly to prevent unsubmerged skin from drying out.[6][13] The sea cow's blubber was 8–10 cm (3–4 in) thick, another adaptation to the frigid climate of the Bering Sea.[14] Its skin was brownish-black, with white patches on some individuals. It was smooth along its back and rough on its sides, with crater-like depressions most likely caused by parasites. This rough texture led to the animal being nicknamed the "bark animal". Hair on its body was sparse, but the insides of the sea cow's flippers were covered in bristles.[5] The fore limbs were roughly 67 cm (26 in) long, and the tail fluke was forked.[5]

The sea cow's head was small and short in comparison to its huge body. The animal's upper lip was large and broad, extending so far beyond the lower jaw that the mouth appeared to be located underneath the skull. Unlike other sirenians, Steller's sea cow was toothless and instead had a dense array of interlacing white bristles on its upper lip. The bristles were about 3.8 cm (1.5 in) in length and were used to tear seaweed stalks and hold food.[5] The sea cow also had two keratinous plates, called ceratodontes, located on its palate and mandible, used for chewing.[15][16] According to Steller, these plates (or "masticatory pads") were held together by interdental papillae, a part of the gums, and had many small holes containing nerves and arteries.[5]

 
Model in the Natural History Museum, London

As with all sirenians, the sea cow's snout pointed downwards, which allowed it to better grasp kelp. The sea cow's nostrils were roughly 5 cm (2 in) long and wide. In addition to those within its mouth, the sea cow also had stiff bristles 10–12.7 cm (3.9–5.0 in) long protruding from its muzzle.[12][5] Steller's sea cow had small eyes located halfway between its nostrils and ears with black irises, livid eyeballs, and canthi which were not externally visible. The animal had no eyelashes, but like other diving creatures such as sea otters, Steller's sea cow had a nictitating membrane, which covered its eyes to prevent injury while feeding. The tongue was small and remained in the back of the mouth, unable to reach the masticatory (chewing) pads.[12][5]

The sea cow's spine is believed to have had seven cervical (neck), 17 thoracic, three lumbar, and 34 caudal (tail) vertebrae. Its ribs were large, with five of 17 pairs making contact with the sternum; it had no clavicles.[5] As in all sirenians, the scapula of Steller's sea cow was fan-shaped, being larger on the posterior side and narrower towards the neck. The anterior border of the scapula was nearly straight, whereas those of modern sirenians are curved. Like other sirenians, the bones of Steller's sea cow were pachyosteosclerotic, meaning they were both bulky (pachyostotic) and dense (osteosclerotic).[12][17] In all collected skeletons of the sea cow, the manus is missing; since Dusisiren—the sister taxon of Hydrodamalis—had reduced phalanges (finger bones), Steller's sea cow possibly did not have a manus at all.[18]

The sea cow's heart was 16 kg (35 lb) in weight; its stomach measured 1.8 m (6 ft) long and 1.5 m (5 ft) wide. The full length of its intestinal tract was about 151 m (500 ft), equaling more than 20 times the animal's length. The sea cow had no gallbladder, but did have a wide common bile duct. Its anus was 10 cm (0.33 ft) in width, with its feces resembling those of horses. The male's penis was 80 cm (2.6 ft) long.[5] Genetic evidence indicates convergent evolution with other marine mammals of genes related to metabolic and immune function, including leptin associated with energy homeostasis and reproductive regulation.[19]

Ecology and behavior edit

 
Illustrations of the dentition of Steller's sea cow by Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber, mid-1800s

Whether Steller's sea cow had any natural predators is unknown. It may have been hunted by killer whales and sharks, though its buoyancy may have made it difficult for killer whales to drown, and the rocky kelp forests in which the sea cow lived may have deterred sharks. According to Steller, the adults guarded the young from predators.[6]

Steller described an ectoparasite on the sea cows that was similar to the whale louse (Cyamus ovalis), but the parasite remains unidentified due to the host's extinction and loss of all original specimens collected by Steller.[20] It was first formally described as Sirenocyamus rhytinae in 1846 by Johann Friedrich von Brandt, although it has since been placed into the genus Cyamus as Cyamus rhytinae.[21] It was the only species of cyamid amphipod to be reported inhabiting a sirenian.[22] Steller also identified an endoparasite in the sea cows, which was likely an ascarid nematode.[15]

Like other sirenians, Steller's sea cow was an obligate herbivore and spent most of the day feeding, only lifting its head every 4–5 minutes for breathing.[5] Kelp was its main food source, making it an algivore. The sea cow likely fed on several species of kelp, which have been identified as Agarum spp., Alaria praelonga, Halosaccion glandiforme, Laminaria saccharina, Nereocyctis luetkeana, and Thalassiophyllum clathrus. Steller's sea cow only fed directly on the soft parts of the kelp, which caused the tougher stem and holdfast to wash up on the shore in heaps. The sea cow may have also fed on seagrass, but the plant was not common enough to support a viable population and could not have been the sea cow's primary food source. Further, the available seagrasses in the sea cow's range (Phyllospadix spp. and Zostera marina) may have grown too deep underwater or been too tough for the animal to consume. Since the sea cow floated, it likely fed on canopy kelp, as it is believed to have only had access to food no deeper than 1 m (3.3 ft) below the tide. Kelp releases a chemical deterrent to protect it from grazing, but canopy kelp releases a lower concentration of the chemical, allowing the sea cow to graze safely.[15][6][23] Steller noted that the sea cow grew thin during the frigid winters, indicating a period of fasting due to low kelp growth.[23] Fossils of Pleistocene Aleutian Island sea cow populations were larger than those from the Commander Islands, indicating that the growth of Commander Island sea cows may have been stunted due to a less favorable habitat and less food than the warmer Aleutian Islands.[12]

 
1898 illustration of a Steller's sea cow family

Steller described the sea cow as being highly social (gregarious). It lived in small family groups and helped injured members, and was also apparently monogamous. Steller's sea cow may have exhibited parental care, and the young were kept at the front of the herd for protection against predators. Steller reported that as a female was being captured, a group of other sea cows attacked the hunting boat by ramming and rocking it, and after the hunt, her mate followed the boat to shore, even after the captured animal had died. Mating season occurred in early spring and gestation took a little over a year, with calves likely delivered in autumn, as Steller observed a greater number of calves in autumn than at any other time of the year. Since female sea cows had only one set of mammary glands, they likely had one calf at a time.[5]

The sea cow used its fore limbs for swimming, feeding, walking in shallow water, defending itself, and holding on to its partner during copulation.[5] According to Steller, the fore limbs were also used to anchor the sea cow down to prevent it from being swept away by the strong nearshore waves.[6] While grazing, the sea cow progressed slowly by moving its tail (fluke) from side to side; more rapid movement was achieved by strong vertical beating of the tail. They often slept on their backs after feeding. According to Steller, the sea cow was nearly mute and made only heavy breathing sounds, raspy snorting similar to a horse, and sighs.[5]

Despite their large size, as with many other marine megafauna in the region, Steller's sea cows may have been prey for the local transient orcas (Orcinus orca); it is likely that they experienced predation, as Steller observed that foraging sea cows with calves would always keep their calves between themselves and the shore, and orcas would have been the most likely candidate for causing this behavior. In addition, early indigenous peoples of the North Pacific may have depended on the sea cow for food, and it is possible that this dependency may have extirpated the sea cow from portions of the North Pacific aside from the Commander Islands. Steller's sea cows may have also had a mutualistic (or possibly even parasitic) relationship with local seabird species; Steller often observed birds perching on the exposed backs of the sea cows, feeding on the parasitic Cyamus rhytinae; this unique relationship that disappeared with the sea cows may have been a food source for many birds, and is similar to the recorded interactions between oxpeckers (Buphagus) and extant African megafauna.[24]

Taxonomy edit

Phylogeny edit

 
 
The closely related dugong
Relations within Sirenia
Based on a 2015 study by Mark Springer[25]
Relations within Hydrodamalinae
Based on a 2004 study by Hitoshi Furusawa[26]

Steller's sea cow was a member of the genus Hydrodamalis, a group of large sirenians, whose sister taxon was Dusisiren. Like those of Steller's sea cow, the ancestors of Dusisiren lived in tropical mangroves before adapting to the cold climates of the North Pacific.[27] Hydrodamalis and Dusisiren are classified together in the subfamily Hydrodamalinae,[28] which diverged from other sirenians around 4 to 8 mya.[29] Steller's sea cow is a member of the family Dugongidae, the sole surviving member of which, and thus Steller's sea cow's closest living relative, is the dugong (Dugong dugon).[30]

Steller's sea cow was a direct descendant of the Cuesta sea cow (H. cuestae),[6] an extinct tropical sea cow that lived off the coast of western North America, particularly California. The Cuesta sea cow is thought to have become extinct due to the onset of the Quaternary glaciation and the subsequent cooling of the oceans. Many populations died out, but the lineage of Steller's sea cow was able to adapt to the colder temperatures.[31] The Takikawa sea cow (H. spissa) of Japan is thought of by some researchers to be a taxonomic synonym of the Cuesta sea cow, but based on a comparison of endocasts, the Takikawa and Steller's sea cows are more derived than the Cuesta sea cow. This has led some to believe that the Takikawa sea cow is its own species.[26] The evolution of the genus Hydrodamalis was characterized by increased size, and a loss of teeth and phalanges, as a response to the onset of the Quaternary glaciation.[31][5]

Research history edit

Steller's sea cow was discovered in 1741 by Georg Wilhelm Steller, and was named after him. Steller researched the wildlife of Bering Island while he was shipwrecked there for about a year;[32] the animals on the island included relict populations of sea cows, sea otters, Steller sea lions, and northern fur seals.[33] As the crew hunted the animals to survive, Steller described them in detail. Steller's account was included in his posthumous publication De bestiis marinis, or The Beasts of the Sea, which was published in 1751 by the Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg. Zoologist Eberhard von Zimmermann formally described Steller's sea cow in 1780 as Manati gigas. Biologist Anders Jahan Retzius in 1794 put the sea cow in the new genus Hydrodamalis, with the specific name of stelleri, in honor of Steller.[4] In 1811, naturalist Johann Karl Wilhelm Illiger reclassified Steller's sea cow into the genus Rytina, which many writers at the time adopted. The name Hydrodamalis gigas, the correct combinatio nova if a separate genus is recognised, was first used in 1895 by Theodore Sherman Palmer.[5]

 
Stejneger's 1925 reconstruction of G. W. Steller measuring a sea cow in 1742

For decades after its discovery, no skeletal remains of a Steller's sea cow were known.[13] This may have been due to rising and falling sea levels over the course of the Quaternary period, which could have left many sea cow bones hidden.[12] The first bones of a Steller's sea cow were unearthed in about 1840, over 70 years after it was presumed to have become extinct. The first partial sea cow skull was discovered in 1844 by Ilya Voznesensky while on the Commander Islands, and the first skeleton was discovered in 1855 on northern Bering Island. These specimens were sent to Saint Petersburg in 1857, and another nearly complete skeleton arrived in Moscow around 1860. Until recently, all the full skeletons were found during the 19th century, being the most productive period in terms of unearthed skeletal remains, from 1878 to 1883. During this time, 12 of the 22 skeletons having known dates of collection were discovered. Some authors did not believe possible the recovery of further significant skeletal material from the Commander Islands after this period, but a skeleton was found in 1983, and two zoologists collected about 90 bones in 1991.[13] Only two to four skeletons of the sea cow exhibited in various museums of the world originate from a single individual.[34] It is known that Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld, Benedykt Dybowski, and Leonhard Hess Stejneger unearthed many skeletal remains from different individuals in the late 1800s, from which composite skeletons were assembled. As of 2006, 27 nearly complete skeletons and 62 complete skulls have been found, but most of them are assemblages of bones from two to 16 different individuals.[13]

In 2021, the nuclear genome was sequenced.[19]

Illustrations edit

The Pallas Picture is the only known drawing of Steller's sea cow believed to be from a complete specimen. It was published by Peter Simon Pallas in his 1840 work Icones ad Zoographia Rosso-Asiatica. Pallas did not specify a source; Stejneger suggested it may have been one of the original illustrations produced by Friedrich Plenisner, a member of Vitus Bering's crew as a painter and surveyor who drew a figure of a female sea cow on Steller's request. Most of Plenisner's depictions were lost during transit from Siberia to Saint Petersburg.[35][36]

Another drawing of Steller's sea cow similar to the Pallas Picture appeared on a 1744 map drawn by Sven Waxell and Sofron Chitrow. The picture may have also been based upon a specimen, and was published in 1893 by Pekarski. The map depicted Vitus Bering's route during the Great Northern Expedition, and featured illustrations of Steller's sea cow and Steller's sea lion in the upper-left corner. The drawing contains some inaccurate features such as the inclusion of eyelids and fingers, leading to doubt that it was drawn from a specimen.[35][36]

Johann Friedrich von Brandt, director of the Russian Academy of Sciences, had the "Ideal Image" drawn in 1846 based upon the Pallas Picture, and then the "Ideal Picture" in 1868 based upon collected skeletons. Two other possible drawings of Steller's sea cow were found in 1891 in Waxell's manuscript diary. There was a map depicting a sea cow, as well as a Steller sea lion and a northern fur seal. The sea cow was depicted with large eyes, a large head, claw-like hands, exaggerated folds on the body, and a tail fluke in perspective lying horizontally rather than vertically. The drawing may have been a distorted depiction of a juvenile, as the figure bears a resemblance to a manatee calf. Another similar image was found by Alexander von Middendorff in 1867 in the library of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and is probably a copy of the Tsarskoye Selo Picture.[35][36]

Range edit

 
Steller's sea cow distribution; yellow during the Pleistocene; red for archaeological evidence; and blue for historical records

The range of Steller's sea cow at the time of its discovery was apparently restricted to the shallow seas around the Commander Islands, which include Bering and Copper Islands.[37][13][5] The Commander Islands remained uninhabited until 1825, when the Russian-American Company relocated Aleuts from Attu Island and Atka Island there.[38]

The first fossils discovered outside the Commander Islands were found in interglacial Pleistocene deposits in Amchitka,[12] and further fossils dating to the late Pleistocene were found in Monterey Bay, California, and Honshu, Japan. This suggests that the sea cow had a far more extensive range in prehistoric times. It cannot be excluded that these fossils belong to other Hydrodamalis species.[13][39][40] The southernmost find is a Middle Pleistocene rib bone from the Bōsō Peninsula of Japan.[41] The remains of three individuals were found preserved in the South Bight Formation of Amchitka; as late Pleistocene interglacial deposits are rare in the Aleutians, the discovery suggests that sea cows were abundant in that era. According to Steller, the sea cow often resided in the shallow, sandy shorelines and in the mouths of freshwater rivers.[12] Genetic evidence suggests Steller's sea cow, as well as the modern dugong, suffered a population bottleneck (a significant reduction in population) bottoming roughly 400,000 years ago.[19]

Bone fragments and accounts by native Aleut people suggest that sea cows also historically inhabited the Near Islands,[42] potentially with viable populations that were in contact with humans in the western Aleutian Islands prior to Steller's discovery in 1741. A sea cow rib discovered in 1998 on Kiska Island was dated to around 1,000 years old, and is now in the possession of the Burke Museum in Seattle. The dating may be skewed due to the marine reservoir effect which causes radiocarbon-dated marine specimens to appear several hundred years older than they are. Marine reservoir effect is caused by the large reserves of C14 in the ocean, and it is more likely that the animal died between 1710 and 1785.[43] A 2004 study reported that sea cow bones discovered on Adak Island were around 1,700 years old, and sea cow bones discovered on Buldir Island were found to be around 1,600 years old.[44] It is possible the bones were from cetaceans and were misclassified.[43] Rib bones of a Steller's sea cow have also been found on St. Lawrence Island, and the specimen is thought to have lived between 800 and 920 CE.[37]

Interactions with humans edit

Extinction edit

Genetic evidence suggests the Steller's sea cows around the Commander Islands were the last of a much more ubiquitous population dispersed across the North Pacific coastal zones. They had the same genetic diversity as the last and rather inbred population of woolly mammoths on Wrangel Island. During glacial periods and reduction in sea levels and temperatures, suitable habitat substantially regressed, fragmenting the population. By the time sea levels stabilized around 5,000 years ago, the population had already plummeted. Together, these indicate that even without human influence, the Steller's sea cow would have still been a dead clade walking, with the vast majority of the population having already gone extinct from natural climatic and sea level shifts, with the tiny remaining population at major risk from a genetic extinction vortex.[19]

 
The sea otter is a keystone species and keeps sea urchin populations in check. Its depopulation in the Aleutian Islands may have led to the decline of kelp and subsequently of sea cows.[23]

The presence of Steller's sea cows in the Aleutian Islands may have caused the Aleut people to migrate westward to hunt them. This possibly led to the sea cow's extirpation in that area, assuming it had not already happened yet, but the archaeological evidence is inconclusive.[12][43][44] One factor potentially leading to extinction of Steller's sea cow, specifically off the coast of St. Lawrence Island, was the Siberian Yupik people who have inhabited St. Lawrence island for 2,000 years. They may have hunted the sea cows into extinction, as the natives have a dietary culture heavily dependent upon marine mammals. The onset of the Medieval Warm Period, which reduced the availability of kelp, may have also been the cause for their local extinction in that area.[37] It has also been argued that the decline of Steller's sea cow may have been an indirect effect of the harvesting of sea otters by the area's aboriginal people. With the otter population reduced, the sea urchin population would have increased, in turn reducing the stock of kelp, its principal food.[23][39] In historic times, though, aboriginal hunting had depleted sea otter populations only in localized areas,[39] and as the sea cow would have been easy prey for aboriginal hunters, accessible populations may have been exterminated with or without simultaneous otter hunting. In any event, the range of the sea cow was limited to coastal areas off uninhabited islands by the time Bering arrived, and the animal was already endangered.[45][11]

When Europeans discovered them, there may have been only 2,000 individuals left.[19] This small population was quickly wiped out by fur traders, seal hunters, and others who followed Vitus Bering's route past its habitat to Alaska.[46] It was also hunted to collect its valuable subcutaneous fat. The animal was hunted and used by Ivan Krassilnikov in 1754 and Ivan Korovin 1762, but Dimitri Bragin, in 1772, and others later, did not see it. Brandt thus concluded that by 1768, twenty-seven years after it had been discovered by Europeans, the species was extinct.[1][39][47] In 1887, Stejneger estimated that there had been fewer than 1,500 individuals remaining at the time of Steller's discovery, and argued there was already an immediate danger of the sea cow's extinction.[1]

The first attempt to hunt the animal by Steller and the other crew members was unsuccessful due to its strength and thick hide. They had attempted to impale it and haul it to shore using a large hook and heavy cable, but the crew could not pierce its skin. In a second attempt a month later, a harpooner speared an animal, and men on shore hauled it in while others repeatedly stabbed it with bayonets. It was dragged into shallow waters, and the crew waited until the tide receded and it was beached to butcher it.[33] After this, they were hunted with relative ease, the challenge being in hauling the animal back to shore. This bounty inspired maritime fur traders to detour to the Commander Islands and restock their food supplies during North Pacific expeditions.[12]

Impact of extinction edit

While not a keystone species, Steller's sea cows likely influenced the community composition of the kelp forests they inhabited, and also boosted their productivity and resilience to environmental stressors by allowing more light into kelp forests and more kelp to grow, and enhancing the recruitment and dispersal of kelp through their feeding behavior. In the modern day, the flow of nutrients from kelp forests to adjacent ecosystems is regulated by the seasons, with seasonal storms and currents being the primary factor. The Steller's sea cow may have allowed this flow to continue year-round, thus allowing for more productivity in adjacent habitats. The disturbance caused by the Steller's sea cow may have facilitated the dispersal of kelp, most notably Nereocystis species, to other habitats, allowing recruitment and colonization of new areas, and facilitating genetic exchange. Their presence may have also allowed sea otters and large marine invertebrates to coexist, indicating a commonly-documented decline in marine invertebrate populations driven by sea otters (an example being in populations of the black leather chiton)[48] may be due to lost ecosystem functions associated with the Steller's sea cow. This indicates that due to the sea cow's extinction, the ecosystem dynamics and resilience of North Pacific kelp forests may have already been compromised well before more well-known modern stressors like overharvesting and climate change.[49][24]

Later reported sightings edit

Sea cow sightings have been reported after Brandt's official 1768 date of extinction. Lucien Turner, an American ethnologist and naturalist, said the natives of Attu Island reported that the sea cows survived into the 1800s, and were sometimes hunted.[43]

In 1963, the official journal of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR published an article announcing a possible sighting. The previous year, the whaling ship Buran had reported a group of large marine mammals grazing on seaweed in shallow water off Kamchatka,[50] in the Gulf of Anadyr. The crew reported seeing six of these animals ranging from 6 to 8 meters (20 to 26 ft), with trunks and split lips. There have also been alleged sightings by local fishermen in the northern Kuril Islands, and around the Kamchatka and Chukchi peninsulas.[51][52]

Uses edit

 
Skeleton excavated on Bering Island in 1948, Zoologisk Museum

Steller's sea cow was described as being "tasty" by Steller; the meat was said to have a taste similar to corned beef, though it was tougher, redder, and needed to be cooked longer. The meat was abundant on the animal, and slow to spoil, perhaps due to the high amount of salt in the animal's diet effectively curing it. The fat could be used for cooking and as an odorless lamp oil. The crew of the St. Peter drank the fat in cups and Steller described it as having a taste like almond oil.[53] The thick, sweet milk of female sea cows could be drunk or made into butter,[5] and the thick, leathery hide could be used to make clothing, such as shoes and belts, and large skin boats sometimes called baidarkas or umiaks.[15]

Towards the end of the 19th century, bones and fossils from the extinct animal were valuable and often sold to museums at high prices. Most were collected during this time, limiting trade after 1900.[13] Some are still sold commercially, as the highly dense cortical bone is well-suited for making items such as knife handles and decorative carvings.[13] Because the sea cow is extinct, native artisan products made in Alaska from this "mermaid ivory" are legal to sell in the United States and do not fall under the jurisdiction of the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) or the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which restrict the trade of marine mammal products. Although the distribution is legal, the sale of unfossilized bones is generally prohibited and trade in products made of the bones is regulated because some of the material is unlikely to be authentic and probably comes from arctic cetaceans.[13][54]

The ethnographer Elizabeth Porfirevna Orlova, from the Russian Museum of Ethnography, was working on the Commander Island Aleuts from August to September 1961. Her research includes notes about a game of accuracy, called kakan ("stones") played with the bones of the Steller's sea cow. Kakan was usually played at home between adults during bad weather, at least during Orlova's fieldwork.[55]

In media and folklore edit

 
Kotick the white seal talking to sea cows in Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book (1895)

In the story The White Seal from The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling, which takes place in the Bering Sea, Kotick the rare white seal consults Sea Cow during his journey to find a new home.[56][57]

Tales of a Sea Cow is a 2012 docufiction film by Icelandic-French artist Etienne de France about a fictional 2006 discovery of Steller's sea cows off the coast of Greenland.[58] The film has been exhibited in art museums and universities in Europe.[59][60]

Steller's sea cows appear in two books of poetry: Nach der Natur (1995) by Winfried Georg Sebald, and Species Evanescens (2009) by Russian poet Andrei Bronnikov. Bronnikov's book depicts the events of the Great Northern Expedition through the eyes of Steller;[61] Sebald's book looks at the conflict between man and nature, including the extinction of Steller's sea cow.[62]

The novel Elolliset (Living things) (2023) by Finnish author and literary scholar Iida Turpeinen uses Steller's sea cow and its demise as a central theme. It features multiple characters at different times in history that were involved with the animal, beginning from Steller’s expedition and telling how the complete skeleton was conserved and ended up in the Helsinki museum of natural history.[63]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Domning, D. (2016). "Hydrodamalis gigas". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T10303A43792683. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T10303A43792683.en. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  2. ^ Shoshani, J. (2005). "Hydrodamalis". In Wilson, D.E.; Reeder, D.M (eds.). Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  3. ^ Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M., eds. (2005). "Hydrodamalis gigas". Mammal Species of the World: A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-8018-8221-0. OCLC 62265494.
  4. ^ a b Palmer, Theodore S. (1895). "The Earliest Name for Steller's sea cow and Dugong". Science. 2 (40): 449–450. doi:10.1126/science.2.40.449-a. PMID 17759916. S2CID 36945810.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Forsten, Ann; Youngman, Phillip M. (1982). (PDF). Mammalian Species (165): 1–3. doi:10.2307/3503855. JSTOR 3503855. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-10-20.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Marsh, Helene; O'Shea, Thomas J.; Reynolds III, John E. (2011). "Steller's sea cow: discovery, biology and exploitation of a relict giant sirenian". Ecology and Conservation of the Sirenia: Dugongs and Manatees. New York, New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 18–35. ISBN 978-0-521-88828-8. OCLC 778803577.
  7. ^ "Found: The Massive Skeleton of a Steller's Sea Cow". 17 November 2017. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  8. ^ "Steller's sea cow – Sunken flagship of the Bering Sea... – The AMIQ Institute". Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  9. ^ "Skeleton of Ancient Sea Cow Found on Bering Island". The Commander Islands Nature and Biosphere Reserve Named Marakov S.V. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  10. ^ Scheffer, Victor B. (November 1972). "The Weight of the Steller Sea Cow". Journal of Mammalogy. 53 (4): 912–914. doi:10.2307/1379236. JSTOR 1379236.
  11. ^ a b Turvey, S. T.; Risley, C. L. (2006). "Modelling the extinction of Steller's sea cow". Biology Letters. 2 (1): 94–97. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2005.0415. PMC 1617197. PMID 17148336.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Whitmore Jr., Frank C.; Gard Jr., L. M. (1977). "Steller's Sea Cow (Hydrodamalis gigas) of Late Pleistocene Age from Amchitka, Aleutian Islands, Alaska" (PDF). Geological Survey Professional Paper. Professional Paper. 1036. doi:10.3133/pp1036.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Mattioli, Stefano; Domning, Daryl P. (2006). "An Annotated List of Extant Skeletal Material of Steller's Sea Cow (Hydrodamalis gigas) (Sirenia: Dugongidae) from the Commander Islands". Aquatic Mammals. 32 (3): 273–288. doi:10.1578/AM.32.3.2006.273.
  14. ^ Berta, Annalisa (2012). Return to the Sea: The Life and Evolutionary Times of Marine Mammals. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 131. ISBN 978-0-520-27057-2. OCLC 757476446. Steller described the sea cow's blubber, 8–10 centimeters (3.1–3.9 in) thick, as...
  15. ^ a b c d Anderson, P. K.; Domning, D. P. (2008). Perrin, William F.; Wursig, Bernd; Thewissen, J. G. M. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals (2nd ed.). San Diego, California: Academic Press. pp. 1104–1106. ISBN 978-0-12-373553-9. OCLC 262718627.
  16. ^ Haeckel (1895). Systematische Phylogenie der Wirbelthiere (Vertebrata). Entwurf einer systematischen Stammesgeschichte (in German). Vol. 3 (1 ed.). Berlin: Georg Reimer. pp. 142–143. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  17. ^ Berta, A.; Sumich, J. L.; Kovacs, K. M. (2015). "Sirenians". Marine Mammals: Evolutionary Biology (3rd ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: Academic Press. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-12-397002-2. OCLC 953575838. The skeleton of sirenians displays both pachyostosis and osteosclerosis...
  18. ^ Takahashi, S.; Domning, D. P.; Saito, T. (1986). "Dusisiren dewana, n. sp. (Mammalia: Sirenia), a new ancestor of Steller's sea cow from the upper Miocene of Yamagata Prefecture, northeastern Japan" (PDF). Transactions and Proceedings of the Paleontological Society of Japan. New Series (141): 296–321. ...the phalanges were even more reduced, and possibly even completely lost, in Steller's sea cow.
  19. ^ a b c d e Sharko, F. S.; Boulygina, E. S.; et al. (2021). "Steller's sea cow genome suggests this species began going extinct before the arrival of Paleolithic humans". Nature Communications. 12 (2215): 2215. Bibcode:2021NatCo..12.2215S. doi:10.1038/s41467-021-22567-5. PMC 8044168. PMID 33850161.
  20. ^ Loker, Eric; Hofkin, Bruce (2015). Parasitology: A Conceptual Approach. New York, New York: Taylor and Francis Group. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-8153-4473-5. OCLC 929783662.
  21. ^ "WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species - Cyamus rhytinae (J.F. Brandt, 1846)". www.marinespecies.org. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
  22. ^ Carlton, J. T.; Geller, J. B.; Reaka-Kudla, M. L.; Norse, E. A. (1999). "Historical Extinctions in the Sea" (PDF). Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics. 30: 523. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.30.1.515. JSTOR 221694. Syrenocyamus rhytinae was recorded from the Steller's Sea Cow...cyamid amphipods are known only from whales and dolphins, and have never (since Steller) been recorded in sirenians.
  23. ^ a b c d Estes, James A.; Burdin, Alexander; Doak, Daniel F. (2016). "Sea otters, kelp forests, and the extinction of Steller's sea cow". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 113 (4): 880–885. Bibcode:2016PNAS..113..880E. doi:10.1073/pnas.1502552112. PMC 4743786. PMID 26504217.
  24. ^ a b Bullen, Cameron D.; Campos, Alberto A.; Gregr, Edward J.; McKechnie, Iain; Chan, Kai M. A. (2021). "The ghost of a giant – Six hypotheses for how an extinct megaherbivore structured kelp forests across the North Pacific Rim". Global Ecology and Biogeography. 30 (10): 2101–2118. doi:10.1111/geb.13370. hdl:1828/13817. ISSN 1466-8238. S2CID 238770019.
  25. ^ Springer, M.; Signore, A. V.; Paijmans, J. L. A.; Vélez-Juarbe, J.; Domning, D. P.; Bauer, C. E.; He, K.; Crerar, L.; Campos, P. F.; Murphy, W. J.; Meredith, R. W.; Gatesy, J.; Willerslev, E.; MacPhee, R. D.; Hofreiter, M.; Campbell, K. L. (2015). "Interordinal gene capture, the phylogenetic position of Steller's sea cow based on molecular and morphological data, and the macroevolutionary history of Sirenia". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 91 (10): 178–193. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2015.05.022. PMID 26050523.
  26. ^ a b Furusawa, Hitoshi (2004). "A phylogeny of the North Pacific Sirenia (Dugongidae: Hydrodamalinae) based on a comparative study of endocranial casts". Paleontological Research. 8 (2): 91–98. doi:10.2517/prpsj.8.91. S2CID 83992432.
  27. ^ Domning, D. P. (1978). Sirenian evolution in the North Pacific Ocean. Vol. 118. Berkeley, California: University of California Publications in Geological Sciences. pp. 1–176. ISBN 978-0-520-09581-6. OCLC 895212825.
  28. ^ "Hydrodamalinae". Fossilworks. Retrieved 12 March 2017 from the Paleobiology Database.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  29. ^ Rainey, W. E.; Lowenstein, J. M.; Sarich, V. M.; Magor, D. M. (1984). "Sirenian molecular systematics—including the extinct Steller's sea cow (Hydrodamalis gigas)". Naturwissenschaften. 71 (11): 586–588. Bibcode:1984NW.....71..586R. doi:10.1007/BF01189187. PMID 6521758. S2CID 28213762.
  30. ^ Marsh, Helene (1989). (PDF). Fauna of Australia. Vol. 1B. Canberra, Australia: CSIRO. ISBN 978-0-644-06056-1. OCLC 27492815. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-11.
  31. ^ a b Domning, Daryl P. (1978). "An Ecological Model for Late Tertiary Sirenian Evolution in the North Pacific Ocean". Systematic Zoology. 25 (4): 352–362. doi:10.2307/2412510. JSTOR 2412510.
  32. ^ Steller, G. W. (1988). Frost, O. W. (ed.). Journal of a Voyage with Bering, 1741–1742. Translated by Engel, M. A.; Frost, O. W. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-2181-3. OCLC 877954975.
  33. ^ a b Frost, Orcutt William (2003). "Shipwreck and Survival". Bering: The Russian Discovery of America. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. pp. 262–264. ISBN 978-0-300-10059-4. OCLC 851981991.
  34. ^ "Look, no hands: Steller's sea cow". The Guardian – Science Animal magic. 25 March 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2017.
  35. ^ a b c d Stejneger, L. H. (1936). Georg Wilhelm Steller, the Pioneer of Alaskan Natural History. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 1–623. ISBN 978-0-576-29124-8. OCLC 836920902.
  36. ^ a b c d Buechner, E. (1891). "Nordischen Seekuh". Memoirs of the Imperial Academy of St. Petersburg Science (in German). 38 (7): 1–24.
  37. ^ a b c Crerar, Lorelei D.; Crerar, Andrew P.; Domning, Daryl P.; Parsons, E. C. M. (2014). "Rewriting the history of an extinction—was a population of Steller's sea cows (Hydrodamalis gigas) at St Lawrence Island also driven to extinction?". Biology Letters. 10 (11): 20140878. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2014.0878. PMC 4261872. PMID 25428930.
  38. ^ Derbeneva, Olga A.; Sukernik, Rem I.; Volodko, Natalia V.; Hosseini, Seyed H.; Lott, Marie T.; Wallace, Douglas C. (2002). "Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in the Aleuts of the Commander Islands and Its Implications for the Genetic History of Beringia". American Journal of Human Genetics. 71 (2): 415–421. doi:10.1086/341720. PMC 379174. PMID 12082644. In 1825–1826, the Russian-American company transferred Aleut families from Attu Island, the westernmost of the Aleutian chain, as well as from Atka/Andreyanov Islands, to the Commanders
  39. ^ a b c d Anderson, Paul K. (July 1995). "Competition, Predation, and the Evolution and Extinction of Steller's Sea Cow, Hydrodamalis gigas". Marine Mammal Science. 11 (3): 391–394. doi:10.1111/j.1748-7692.1995.tb00294.x.
  40. ^ MacDonald, Stephen O.; Cook, Joseph A. (2009). Recent Mammals of Alaska. Fairbanks, Alaska: University of Alaska Press. pp. 57–58. ISBN 978-1-60223-047-7. OCLC 488523994.
  41. ^ Furusawa, H.; Kohno, N. (1994). "Steller's sea-cow (Sirenia: Hydrodamalis gigas) from the Middle Pleistocene Mandano Formation of the Boso Peninsula, central Japan". Japanese Paleontological Society (in Japanese). 56. doi:10.14825/kaseki.56.0_26.
  42. ^ Corbett, D. G.; Causey, D.; Clemente, M.; Koch, P. L.; Doroff, A.; Lefavre, C.; West, D. (2008). "Aleut Hunters, Sea Otters, and Sea Cows". Human Impacts on Ancient Marine Ecosystems. University of California Press. pp. 43–76. doi:10.1525/9780520934290-005. ISBN 978-0-520-93429-0. JSTOR 10.1525/j.ctt1pphh3. OCLC 929645577. S2CID 226791158.
  43. ^ a b c d Domning, Daryl P.; Thomason, James; Corbett, Debra G. (2007). "Steller's sea cow in the Aleutian Islands". Marine Mammal Science. 23 (4): 976–983. doi:10.1111/j.1748-7692.2007.00153.x.
  44. ^ a b Savinetsky, A. B.; Kiseleva, N. K.; Khassanov, B. F. (2004). "Dynamics of sea mammaland bird populations of the Bering Sea region over the last several millennia". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 209 (1–4): 335–352. Bibcode:2004PPP...209..335S. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2004.02.009.
  45. ^ Ellis, Richard (2004). No Turning Back: The Life and Death of Animal Species. New York, New York: Harper Perennial. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-06-055804-8. OCLC 961898476.
  46. ^ Haycox, Stephen W. (2002). Alaska: An American Colony. Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press. pp. 55, 144. ISBN 978-0-295-98249-6. OCLC 49225731. Each year, one or more vessels left Okhotsk or Petropavlosk on Kamchatka for hunting trips to the [Aleutian] islands. Typically, the ships would sail to the Commander Islands, where they would spend some time slaughtering and preserving the mat of Steller's rhytina (a sea cow)...
  47. ^ Jones, Ryan T. (September 2011). "A 'Havock Made among Them': Animals, Empire, and Extinction in the Russian North Pacific, 1741–1810". Environmental History. 16 (4): 585–609. doi:10.1093/envhis/emr091. JSTOR 23049853.
  48. ^ Salomon, Anne K.; Tanape, Nick M.; Huntington, Henry P. (September 2007). "Serial depletion of marine invertebrates leads to the decline of a strongly interacting grazer". Ecological Applications. 17 (6): 1752–1770. doi:10.1890/06-1369.1. ISSN 1051-0761. PMID 17913138.
  49. ^ Bullen, Cameron David (2020). A marine megafaunal extinction and its consequences for kelp forests of the North Pacific. open.library.ubc.ca (Thesis). doi:10.14288/1.0391881. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
  50. ^ Silverberg, R. (1973). The Dodo, the Auk and the Oryx. London, United Kingdom: Puffin Books. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-14-030619-4. OCLC 473809649.
  51. ^ Berzin, A. A.; Tikhomirov, E. A.; Troinin, V. I. (2007) [1963]. Translated by Ricker, W. E. "Ischezla li Stellerova korova?" [Was Steller's sea cow exterminated?] (PDF). Priroda. 52 (8): 73–75.
  52. ^ Bertram, C.; Bertram, K. (1964). "Does the 'extinct' sea cow survive?". New Scientist. 24 (415): 313.
  53. ^ Littlepage, Dean. Steller's Island: Adventures of a Pioneer Naturalist in Alaska.
  54. ^ Crerar, L. D.; Freeman, E. W.; Domning, D. P.; Parsons, E. C. M. (2017). "Illegal Trade of Marine Mammal Bone Exposed: Simple Test Identifies Bones of 'Mermaid Ivory' or Steller's Sea Cow (Hydrodamalis gigas)". Frontiers in Marine Science. 3 (272). doi:10.3389/fmars.2016.00272. S2CID 35462508.
  55. ^ Korsun, S. A. (2013). "Fieldwork on the Commander Islands Aleuts" (PDF). Alaska Journal of Anthropology. 11 (1–2): 169–181.
  56. ^ Kipling, Rudyard (1894). "The White Seal". The Jungle Books. ISBN 978-0-585-00499-0. OCLC 883570362.
  57. ^ Kipling, Rudyard (2013) [1894]. Nagai, Kaori (ed.). The Jungle Books. Penguin UK. p. 405. ISBN 978-0-14-196839-1. OCLC 851153394.
  58. ^ "Tales of a Sea Cow (2012)". IMDb. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  59. ^ . alan-shapiro.com. Archived from the original on 2014-05-02. Retrieved 2014-05-01.
  60. ^ Bureaud, Annick. "Tales of a Sea Cow: A Fabulatory Science Story" (PDF). Retrieved August 19, 2016.
  61. ^ Bronnikov, Andrei (2009). Species Evanescens (in Russian). Reflections. ISBN 978-90-79625-02-4. OCLC 676724013.
  62. ^ Sebald, W. G. "Nach der Natur Sebald" (in German). Hanser Literaturverlage. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  63. ^ Turpeinen, Iida. "Elolliset" (in Finnish). Schildts&Söderströms. Retrieved 6 January 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Steller, Georg W. (2011) [1751]. "The Manatee". In Miller, Walter (ed.). De Bestiis Marinis. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska. pp. 13–43. ISBN 978-1-295-08525-5. OCLC 867637409.
  • Steller, G. W. (1925). "Appendix A: Topographical and Physical Description of Bering Island which Lies in the Eastern Sea off the Coast of Kamchatka" (PDF). In Golder, F. A. (ed.). Steller's Journal of the Sea Voyage from Kamchatka to America and Return on the Second Expedition, 1741–1742. Bering's Voyages: An Account of the Efforts of the Russians to Determine the Relation of Asia and America. Vol. II. Translated by Stejneger, Leonhard. New York, New York: American Geographical Society. p. 207.

External links edit

  • Animal Diversity Web
  • Steller's sea cow information from the BBC
  • Summary of the research history done on Steller's sea cow

steller, confused, with, steller, lion, hydrodamalis, gigas, extinct, sirenian, described, georg, wilhelm, steller, 1741, that, time, found, only, around, commander, islands, bering, between, alaska, russia, range, extended, across, north, pacific, during, ple. Not to be confused with Steller sea lion Steller s sea cow Hydrodamalis gigas is an extinct sirenian described by Georg Wilhelm Steller in 1741 At that time it was found only around the Commander Islands in the Bering Sea between Alaska and Russia its range extended across the North Pacific during the Pleistocene epoch and likely contracted to such an extreme degree due to the glacial cycle It is possible indigenous populations interacted with the animal before Europeans Steller first encountered it on Vitus Bering s Great Northern Expedition when the crew became shipwrecked on Bering Island Much of what is known about its behavior comes from Steller s observations on the island documented in his posthumous publication On the Beasts of the Sea Within 27 years of its discovery by Europeans the slow moving and easily caught mammal was hunted into extinction for its meat fat and hide Steller s sea cowTemporal range Pleistocene C E 1768Skeleton at the Finnish Museum of Natural HistoryConservation statusExtinct 1768 IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder SireniaFamily DugongidaeGenus HydrodamalisSpecies H gigasBinomial name Hydrodamalis gigas Zimmermann 1780 Map showing the position of the Commander Islands to the east of Kamchatka The larger island to the west is Bering Island the smaller island to the east is Copper Island Synonyms 2 3 4 5 List of synonyms Hydrodamalis H stelleri Retzius 1794 Rytina R manatus borealis Illiger 1811 R borealis Illiger 1815 R cetacea Illiger 1815 R stelleri Desmarest 1819 R borealis Cuvier 1836 R stelleri Burmeister 1837 R gigas Gray 1850 Manati M gigas Zimmermann 1780 M balaenurus Boddaert 1785 M borealis Link 1795 Trichechus T manatus borealis Gmelin 1788 T borealis Shaw 1800 Sirene S borealis Link 1794 Nepus N stelleri Fischer 1814 Stellerus S borealis Desmarest 1822 Haligyna H borealis Billberg 1827 Manatus M gigas Lucas 1891Some 18th century adults would have reached weights of 8 10 t 8 8 11 0 short tons and lengths up to 9 m 30 ft It was a member of the family Dugongidae of which the 3 m 9 8 ft long dugong Dugong dugon is the sole living member It had a thicker layer of blubber than other members of the order an adaptation to the cold waters of its environment Its tail was forked like that of whales or dugongs Lacking true teeth it had an array of white bristles on its upper lip and two keratinous plates within its mouth for chewing It fed mainly on kelp and communicated with sighs and snorting sounds Steller believed it was a monogamous and social animal living in small family groups and raising its young similar to modern sirenians Contents 1 Description 2 Ecology and behavior 3 Taxonomy 3 1 Phylogeny 3 2 Research history 3 3 Illustrations 4 Range 5 Interactions with humans 5 1 Extinction 5 1 1 Impact of extinction 5 2 Later reported sightings 5 3 Uses 5 4 In media and folklore 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDescription edit nbsp The skull of a Steller s sea cow Natural History Museum of LondonSteller s sea cows are reported to have grown to 8 to 9 m 26 to 30 ft long as adults much larger than extant sirenians 6 In 1987 a rather complete skeleton was found on Bering Island measuring 3 m 9 8 ft 7 8 In 2017 another such skeleton was found on Bering Island measuring 5 2 m 17 ft and in life probably about 6 m 20 ft 9 Georg Steller s writings contain two contradictory estimates of weight 4 and 24 3 t 4 4 and 26 8 short tons The true value is estimated to fall between these figures at about 8 10 t 8 8 11 0 short tons 10 This size made the sea cow one of the largest mammals of the Holocene epoch along with baleen whales and some few tooth whales 11 and was likely an adaptation to reduce its surface area to volume ratio and conserve heat 12 Unlike other sirenians Steller s sea cow was positively buoyant meaning that it was unable to submerge completely It had a very thick outer skin 2 5 cm 1 in to prevent injury from sharp rocks and ice and possibly to prevent unsubmerged skin from drying out 6 13 The sea cow s blubber was 8 10 cm 3 4 in thick another adaptation to the frigid climate of the Bering Sea 14 Its skin was brownish black with white patches on some individuals It was smooth along its back and rough on its sides with crater like depressions most likely caused by parasites This rough texture led to the animal being nicknamed the bark animal Hair on its body was sparse but the insides of the sea cow s flippers were covered in bristles 5 The fore limbs were roughly 67 cm 26 in long and the tail fluke was forked 5 The sea cow s head was small and short in comparison to its huge body The animal s upper lip was large and broad extending so far beyond the lower jaw that the mouth appeared to be located underneath the skull Unlike other sirenians Steller s sea cow was toothless and instead had a dense array of interlacing white bristles on its upper lip The bristles were about 3 8 cm 1 5 in in length and were used to tear seaweed stalks and hold food 5 The sea cow also had two keratinous plates called ceratodontes located on its palate and mandible used for chewing 15 16 According to Steller these plates or masticatory pads were held together by interdental papillae a part of the gums and had many small holes containing nerves and arteries 5 nbsp Model in the Natural History Museum LondonAs with all sirenians the sea cow s snout pointed downwards which allowed it to better grasp kelp The sea cow s nostrils were roughly 5 cm 2 in long and wide In addition to those within its mouth the sea cow also had stiff bristles 10 12 7 cm 3 9 5 0 in long protruding from its muzzle 12 5 Steller s sea cow had small eyes located halfway between its nostrils and ears with black irises livid eyeballs and canthi which were not externally visible The animal had no eyelashes but like other diving creatures such as sea otters Steller s sea cow had a nictitating membrane which covered its eyes to prevent injury while feeding The tongue was small and remained in the back of the mouth unable to reach the masticatory chewing pads 12 5 The sea cow s spine is believed to have had seven cervical neck 17 thoracic three lumbar and 34 caudal tail vertebrae Its ribs were large with five of 17 pairs making contact with the sternum it had no clavicles 5 As in all sirenians the scapula of Steller s sea cow was fan shaped being larger on the posterior side and narrower towards the neck The anterior border of the scapula was nearly straight whereas those of modern sirenians are curved Like other sirenians the bones of Steller s sea cow were pachyosteosclerotic meaning they were both bulky pachyostotic and dense osteosclerotic 12 17 In all collected skeletons of the sea cow the manus is missing since Dusisiren the sister taxon of Hydrodamalis had reduced phalanges finger bones Steller s sea cow possibly did not have a manus at all 18 The sea cow s heart was 16 kg 35 lb in weight its stomach measured 1 8 m 6 ft long and 1 5 m 5 ft wide The full length of its intestinal tract was about 151 m 500 ft equaling more than 20 times the animal s length The sea cow had no gallbladder but did have a wide common bile duct Its anus was 10 cm 0 33 ft in width with its feces resembling those of horses The male s penis was 80 cm 2 6 ft long 5 Genetic evidence indicates convergent evolution with other marine mammals of genes related to metabolic and immune function including leptin associated with energy homeostasis and reproductive regulation 19 Ecology and behavior edit nbsp Illustrations of the dentition of Steller s sea cow by Johann Christian Daniel von Schreber mid 1800sWhether Steller s sea cow had any natural predators is unknown It may have been hunted by killer whales and sharks though its buoyancy may have made it difficult for killer whales to drown and the rocky kelp forests in which the sea cow lived may have deterred sharks According to Steller the adults guarded the young from predators 6 Steller described an ectoparasite on the sea cows that was similar to the whale louse Cyamus ovalis but the parasite remains unidentified due to the host s extinction and loss of all original specimens collected by Steller 20 It was first formally described as Sirenocyamus rhytinae in 1846 by Johann Friedrich von Brandt although it has since been placed into the genus Cyamus as Cyamus rhytinae 21 It was the only species of cyamid amphipod to be reported inhabiting a sirenian 22 Steller also identified an endoparasite in the sea cows which was likely an ascarid nematode 15 Like other sirenians Steller s sea cow was an obligate herbivore and spent most of the day feeding only lifting its head every 4 5 minutes for breathing 5 Kelp was its main food source making it an algivore The sea cow likely fed on several species of kelp which have been identified as Agarum spp Alaria praelonga Halosaccion glandiforme Laminaria saccharina Nereocyctis luetkeana and Thalassiophyllum clathrus Steller s sea cow only fed directly on the soft parts of the kelp which caused the tougher stem and holdfast to wash up on the shore in heaps The sea cow may have also fed on seagrass but the plant was not common enough to support a viable population and could not have been the sea cow s primary food source Further the available seagrasses in the sea cow s range Phyllospadix spp and Zostera marina may have grown too deep underwater or been too tough for the animal to consume Since the sea cow floated it likely fed on canopy kelp as it is believed to have only had access to food no deeper than 1 m 3 3 ft below the tide Kelp releases a chemical deterrent to protect it from grazing but canopy kelp releases a lower concentration of the chemical allowing the sea cow to graze safely 15 6 23 Steller noted that the sea cow grew thin during the frigid winters indicating a period of fasting due to low kelp growth 23 Fossils of Pleistocene Aleutian Island sea cow populations were larger than those from the Commander Islands indicating that the growth of Commander Island sea cows may have been stunted due to a less favorable habitat and less food than the warmer Aleutian Islands 12 nbsp 1898 illustration of a Steller s sea cow familySteller described the sea cow as being highly social gregarious It lived in small family groups and helped injured members and was also apparently monogamous Steller s sea cow may have exhibited parental care and the young were kept at the front of the herd for protection against predators Steller reported that as a female was being captured a group of other sea cows attacked the hunting boat by ramming and rocking it and after the hunt her mate followed the boat to shore even after the captured animal had died Mating season occurred in early spring and gestation took a little over a year with calves likely delivered in autumn as Steller observed a greater number of calves in autumn than at any other time of the year Since female sea cows had only one set of mammary glands they likely had one calf at a time 5 The sea cow used its fore limbs for swimming feeding walking in shallow water defending itself and holding on to its partner during copulation 5 According to Steller the fore limbs were also used to anchor the sea cow down to prevent it from being swept away by the strong nearshore waves 6 While grazing the sea cow progressed slowly by moving its tail fluke from side to side more rapid movement was achieved by strong vertical beating of the tail They often slept on their backs after feeding According to Steller the sea cow was nearly mute and made only heavy breathing sounds raspy snorting similar to a horse and sighs 5 Despite their large size as with many other marine megafauna in the region Steller s sea cows may have been prey for the local transient orcas Orcinus orca it is likely that they experienced predation as Steller observed that foraging sea cows with calves would always keep their calves between themselves and the shore and orcas would have been the most likely candidate for causing this behavior In addition early indigenous peoples of the North Pacific may have depended on the sea cow for food and it is possible that this dependency may have extirpated the sea cow from portions of the North Pacific aside from the Commander Islands Steller s sea cows may have also had a mutualistic or possibly even parasitic relationship with local seabird species Steller often observed birds perching on the exposed backs of the sea cows feeding on the parasitic Cyamus rhytinae this unique relationship that disappeared with the sea cows may have been a food source for many birds and is similar to the recorded interactions between oxpeckers Buphagus and extant African megafauna 24 Taxonomy editPhylogeny edit nbsp nbsp The closely related dugong Relations within SireniaSirenia Anomotherium langewieschei Miosiren kockiTrichechus inunguisTrichechus manatusTrichechus senegalensis Eotheroides aegyptiacum Halitherium schinzii Priscosiren atlanticaDugong dugon Metaxytherium krahuletzi Metaxytherium serresii Metaxytherium medium Metaxytherium floridanum Metaxytherium crataegense Metaxytherium arctodites Dusisiren jordani Hydrodamalis cuestae Hydrodamalis gigasBased on a 2015 study by Mark Springer 25 Relations within HydrodamalinaeSirenia Dusisiren reinharti Dusisiren jordani Dusisiren dewana Dusisiren takasatensis Hydrodamalis cuestae Hydrodamalis spissa Hydrodamalis gigasBased on a 2004 study by Hitoshi Furusawa 26 Steller s sea cow was a member of the genus Hydrodamalis a group of large sirenians whose sister taxon was Dusisiren Like those of Steller s sea cow the ancestors of Dusisiren lived in tropical mangroves before adapting to the cold climates of the North Pacific 27 Hydrodamalis and Dusisiren are classified together in the subfamily Hydrodamalinae 28 which diverged from other sirenians around 4 to 8 mya 29 Steller s sea cow is a member of the family Dugongidae the sole surviving member of which and thus Steller s sea cow s closest living relative is the dugong Dugong dugon 30 Steller s sea cow was a direct descendant of the Cuesta sea cow H cuestae 6 an extinct tropical sea cow that lived off the coast of western North America particularly California The Cuesta sea cow is thought to have become extinct due to the onset of the Quaternary glaciation and the subsequent cooling of the oceans Many populations died out but the lineage of Steller s sea cow was able to adapt to the colder temperatures 31 The Takikawa sea cow H spissa of Japan is thought of by some researchers to be a taxonomic synonym of the Cuesta sea cow but based on a comparison of endocasts the Takikawa and Steller s sea cows are more derived than the Cuesta sea cow This has led some to believe that the Takikawa sea cow is its own species 26 The evolution of the genus Hydrodamalis was characterized by increased size and a loss of teeth and phalanges as a response to the onset of the Quaternary glaciation 31 5 Research history edit Steller s sea cow was discovered in 1741 by Georg Wilhelm Steller and was named after him Steller researched the wildlife of Bering Island while he was shipwrecked there for about a year 32 the animals on the island included relict populations of sea cows sea otters Steller sea lions and northern fur seals 33 As the crew hunted the animals to survive Steller described them in detail Steller s account was included in his posthumous publication De bestiis marinis or The Beasts of the Sea which was published in 1751 by the Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg Zoologist Eberhard von Zimmermann formally described Steller s sea cow in 1780 as Manati gigas Biologist Anders Jahan Retzius in 1794 put the sea cow in the new genus Hydrodamalis with the specific name of stelleri in honor of Steller 4 In 1811 naturalist Johann Karl Wilhelm Illiger reclassified Steller s sea cow into the genus Rytina which many writers at the time adopted The name Hydrodamalis gigas the correct combinatio nova if a separate genus is recognised was first used in 1895 by Theodore Sherman Palmer 5 nbsp Stejneger s 1925 reconstruction of G W Steller measuring a sea cow in 1742For decades after its discovery no skeletal remains of a Steller s sea cow were known 13 This may have been due to rising and falling sea levels over the course of the Quaternary period which could have left many sea cow bones hidden 12 The first bones of a Steller s sea cow were unearthed in about 1840 over 70 years after it was presumed to have become extinct The first partial sea cow skull was discovered in 1844 by Ilya Voznesensky while on the Commander Islands and the first skeleton was discovered in 1855 on northern Bering Island These specimens were sent to Saint Petersburg in 1857 and another nearly complete skeleton arrived in Moscow around 1860 Until recently all the full skeletons were found during the 19th century being the most productive period in terms of unearthed skeletal remains from 1878 to 1883 During this time 12 of the 22 skeletons having known dates of collection were discovered Some authors did not believe possible the recovery of further significant skeletal material from the Commander Islands after this period but a skeleton was found in 1983 and two zoologists collected about 90 bones in 1991 13 Only two to four skeletons of the sea cow exhibited in various museums of the world originate from a single individual 34 It is known that Adolf Erik Nordenskiold Benedykt Dybowski and Leonhard Hess Stejneger unearthed many skeletal remains from different individuals in the late 1800s from which composite skeletons were assembled As of 2006 27 nearly complete skeletons and 62 complete skulls have been found but most of them are assemblages of bones from two to 16 different individuals 13 In 2021 the nuclear genome was sequenced 19 Illustrations edit The Pallas Picture is the only known drawing of Steller s sea cow believed to be from a complete specimen It was published by Peter Simon Pallas in his 1840 work Icones ad Zoographia Rosso Asiatica Pallas did not specify a source Stejneger suggested it may have been one of the original illustrations produced by Friedrich Plenisner a member of Vitus Bering s crew as a painter and surveyor who drew a figure of a female sea cow on Steller s request Most of Plenisner s depictions were lost during transit from Siberia to Saint Petersburg 35 36 Another drawing of Steller s sea cow similar to the Pallas Picture appeared on a 1744 map drawn by Sven Waxell and Sofron Chitrow The picture may have also been based upon a specimen and was published in 1893 by Pekarski The map depicted Vitus Bering s route during the Great Northern Expedition and featured illustrations of Steller s sea cow and Steller s sea lion in the upper left corner The drawing contains some inaccurate features such as the inclusion of eyelids and fingers leading to doubt that it was drawn from a specimen 35 36 Johann Friedrich von Brandt director of the Russian Academy of Sciences had the Ideal Image drawn in 1846 based upon the Pallas Picture and then the Ideal Picture in 1868 based upon collected skeletons Two other possible drawings of Steller s sea cow were found in 1891 in Waxell s manuscript diary There was a map depicting a sea cow as well as a Steller sea lion and a northern fur seal The sea cow was depicted with large eyes a large head claw like hands exaggerated folds on the body and a tail fluke in perspective lying horizontally rather than vertically The drawing may have been a distorted depiction of a juvenile as the figure bears a resemblance to a manatee calf Another similar image was found by Alexander von Middendorff in 1867 in the library of the Russian Academy of Sciences and is probably a copy of the Tsarskoye Selo Picture 35 36 Early depictions of Steller s sea cow 35 36 nbsp The Pallas Picture the only surviving drawing of Steller s sea cow by Friedrich Plenisner and possibly the only one drawn from a complete specimen 1840 nbsp The Pekarski Picture a map of the Commander Islands including illustrations of Steller s sea cow and the Steller sea lion by a crew member of Vitus Bering s Great Northern Expedition 1893 nbsp The Ideal Image by Johann Friedrich von Brandt based on the Pallas Picture 1846 nbsp The Ideal Picture by Johann Friedrich von Brandt based on the Pallas Picture and skeletons 1868 nbsp The Tsarskoye Selo Picture a map of the Commander Islands including illustrations of Steller s sea cow the Steller sea lion and the northern fur seal by Sven Waxell 1891 the tail is lying flat on the ground in perspective nbsp The second Tsarskoye Selo Picture by Sven Waxell 1891 Range edit nbsp Steller s sea cow distribution yellow during the Pleistocene red for archaeological evidence and blue for historical recordsThe range of Steller s sea cow at the time of its discovery was apparently restricted to the shallow seas around the Commander Islands which include Bering and Copper Islands 37 13 5 The Commander Islands remained uninhabited until 1825 when the Russian American Company relocated Aleuts from Attu Island and Atka Island there 38 The first fossils discovered outside the Commander Islands were found in interglacial Pleistocene deposits in Amchitka 12 and further fossils dating to the late Pleistocene were found in Monterey Bay California and Honshu Japan This suggests that the sea cow had a far more extensive range in prehistoric times It cannot be excluded that these fossils belong to other Hydrodamalis species 13 39 40 The southernmost find is a Middle Pleistocene rib bone from the Bōsō Peninsula of Japan 41 The remains of three individuals were found preserved in the South Bight Formation of Amchitka as late Pleistocene interglacial deposits are rare in the Aleutians the discovery suggests that sea cows were abundant in that era According to Steller the sea cow often resided in the shallow sandy shorelines and in the mouths of freshwater rivers 12 Genetic evidence suggests Steller s sea cow as well as the modern dugong suffered a population bottleneck a significant reduction in population bottoming roughly 400 000 years ago 19 Bone fragments and accounts by native Aleut people suggest that sea cows also historically inhabited the Near Islands 42 potentially with viable populations that were in contact with humans in the western Aleutian Islands prior to Steller s discovery in 1741 A sea cow rib discovered in 1998 on Kiska Island was dated to around 1 000 years old and is now in the possession of the Burke Museum in Seattle The dating may be skewed due to the marine reservoir effect which causes radiocarbon dated marine specimens to appear several hundred years older than they are Marine reservoir effect is caused by the large reserves of C14 in the ocean and it is more likely that the animal died between 1710 and 1785 43 A 2004 study reported that sea cow bones discovered on Adak Island were around 1 700 years old and sea cow bones discovered on Buldir Island were found to be around 1 600 years old 44 It is possible the bones were from cetaceans and were misclassified 43 Rib bones of a Steller s sea cow have also been found on St Lawrence Island and the specimen is thought to have lived between 800 and 920 CE 37 Interactions with humans editExtinction edit Genetic evidence suggests the Steller s sea cows around the Commander Islands were the last of a much more ubiquitous population dispersed across the North Pacific coastal zones They had the same genetic diversity as the last and rather inbred population of woolly mammoths on Wrangel Island During glacial periods and reduction in sea levels and temperatures suitable habitat substantially regressed fragmenting the population By the time sea levels stabilized around 5 000 years ago the population had already plummeted Together these indicate that even without human influence the Steller s sea cow would have still been a dead clade walking with the vast majority of the population having already gone extinct from natural climatic and sea level shifts with the tiny remaining population at major risk from a genetic extinction vortex 19 nbsp The sea otter is a keystone species and keeps sea urchin populations in check Its depopulation in the Aleutian Islands may have led to the decline of kelp and subsequently of sea cows 23 The presence of Steller s sea cows in the Aleutian Islands may have caused the Aleut people to migrate westward to hunt them This possibly led to the sea cow s extirpation in that area assuming it had not already happened yet but the archaeological evidence is inconclusive 12 43 44 One factor potentially leading to extinction of Steller s sea cow specifically off the coast of St Lawrence Island was the Siberian Yupik people who have inhabited St Lawrence island for 2 000 years They may have hunted the sea cows into extinction as the natives have a dietary culture heavily dependent upon marine mammals The onset of the Medieval Warm Period which reduced the availability of kelp may have also been the cause for their local extinction in that area 37 It has also been argued that the decline of Steller s sea cow may have been an indirect effect of the harvesting of sea otters by the area s aboriginal people With the otter population reduced the sea urchin population would have increased in turn reducing the stock of kelp its principal food 23 39 In historic times though aboriginal hunting had depleted sea otter populations only in localized areas 39 and as the sea cow would have been easy prey for aboriginal hunters accessible populations may have been exterminated with or without simultaneous otter hunting In any event the range of the sea cow was limited to coastal areas off uninhabited islands by the time Bering arrived and the animal was already endangered 45 11 When Europeans discovered them there may have been only 2 000 individuals left 19 This small population was quickly wiped out by fur traders seal hunters and others who followed Vitus Bering s route past its habitat to Alaska 46 It was also hunted to collect its valuable subcutaneous fat The animal was hunted and used by Ivan Krassilnikov in 1754 and Ivan Korovin 1762 but Dimitri Bragin in 1772 and others later did not see it Brandt thus concluded that by 1768 twenty seven years after it had been discovered by Europeans the species was extinct 1 39 47 In 1887 Stejneger estimated that there had been fewer than 1 500 individuals remaining at the time of Steller s discovery and argued there was already an immediate danger of the sea cow s extinction 1 The first attempt to hunt the animal by Steller and the other crew members was unsuccessful due to its strength and thick hide They had attempted to impale it and haul it to shore using a large hook and heavy cable but the crew could not pierce its skin In a second attempt a month later a harpooner speared an animal and men on shore hauled it in while others repeatedly stabbed it with bayonets It was dragged into shallow waters and the crew waited until the tide receded and it was beached to butcher it 33 After this they were hunted with relative ease the challenge being in hauling the animal back to shore This bounty inspired maritime fur traders to detour to the Commander Islands and restock their food supplies during North Pacific expeditions 12 Impact of extinction edit While not a keystone species Steller s sea cows likely influenced the community composition of the kelp forests they inhabited and also boosted their productivity and resilience to environmental stressors by allowing more light into kelp forests and more kelp to grow and enhancing the recruitment and dispersal of kelp through their feeding behavior In the modern day the flow of nutrients from kelp forests to adjacent ecosystems is regulated by the seasons with seasonal storms and currents being the primary factor The Steller s sea cow may have allowed this flow to continue year round thus allowing for more productivity in adjacent habitats The disturbance caused by the Steller s sea cow may have facilitated the dispersal of kelp most notably Nereocystis species to other habitats allowing recruitment and colonization of new areas and facilitating genetic exchange Their presence may have also allowed sea otters and large marine invertebrates to coexist indicating a commonly documented decline in marine invertebrate populations driven by sea otters an example being in populations of the black leather chiton 48 may be due to lost ecosystem functions associated with the Steller s sea cow This indicates that due to the sea cow s extinction the ecosystem dynamics and resilience of North Pacific kelp forests may have already been compromised well before more well known modern stressors like overharvesting and climate change 49 24 Later reported sightings edit Sea cow sightings have been reported after Brandt s official 1768 date of extinction Lucien Turner an American ethnologist and naturalist said the natives of Attu Island reported that the sea cows survived into the 1800s and were sometimes hunted 43 In 1963 the official journal of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR published an article announcing a possible sighting The previous year the whaling ship Buran had reported a group of large marine mammals grazing on seaweed in shallow water off Kamchatka 50 in the Gulf of Anadyr The crew reported seeing six of these animals ranging from 6 to 8 meters 20 to 26 ft with trunks and split lips There have also been alleged sightings by local fishermen in the northern Kuril Islands and around the Kamchatka and Chukchi peninsulas 51 52 Uses edit nbsp Skeleton excavated on Bering Island in 1948 Zoologisk MuseumSteller s sea cow was described as being tasty by Steller the meat was said to have a taste similar to corned beef though it was tougher redder and needed to be cooked longer The meat was abundant on the animal and slow to spoil perhaps due to the high amount of salt in the animal s diet effectively curing it The fat could be used for cooking and as an odorless lamp oil The crew of the St Peter drank the fat in cups and Steller described it as having a taste like almond oil 53 The thick sweet milk of female sea cows could be drunk or made into butter 5 and the thick leathery hide could be used to make clothing such as shoes and belts and large skin boats sometimes called baidarkas or umiaks 15 Towards the end of the 19th century bones and fossils from the extinct animal were valuable and often sold to museums at high prices Most were collected during this time limiting trade after 1900 13 Some are still sold commercially as the highly dense cortical bone is well suited for making items such as knife handles and decorative carvings 13 Because the sea cow is extinct native artisan products made in Alaska from this mermaid ivory are legal to sell in the United States and do not fall under the jurisdiction of the Marine Mammal Protection Act MMPA or the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora CITES which restrict the trade of marine mammal products Although the distribution is legal the sale of unfossilized bones is generally prohibited and trade in products made of the bones is regulated because some of the material is unlikely to be authentic and probably comes from arctic cetaceans 13 54 The ethnographer Elizabeth Porfirevna Orlova from the Russian Museum of Ethnography was working on the Commander Island Aleuts from August to September 1961 Her research includes notes about a game of accuracy called kakan stones played with the bones of the Steller s sea cow Kakan was usually played at home between adults during bad weather at least during Orlova s fieldwork 55 In media and folklore edit nbsp Kotick the white seal talking to sea cows in Rudyard Kipling s The Jungle Book 1895 In the story The White Seal from The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling which takes place in the Bering Sea Kotick the rare white seal consults Sea Cow during his journey to find a new home 56 57 Tales of a Sea Cow is a 2012 docufiction film by Icelandic French artist Etienne de France about a fictional 2006 discovery of Steller s sea cows off the coast of Greenland 58 The film has been exhibited in art museums and universities in Europe 59 60 Steller s sea cows appear in two books of poetry Nach der Natur 1995 by Winfried Georg Sebald and Species Evanescens 2009 by Russian poet Andrei Bronnikov Bronnikov s book depicts the events of the Great Northern Expedition through the eyes of Steller 61 Sebald s book looks at the conflict between man and nature including the extinction of Steller s sea cow 62 The novel Elolliset Living things 2023 by Finnish author and literary scholar Iida Turpeinen uses Steller s sea cow and its demise as a central theme It features multiple characters at different times in history that were involved with the animal beginning from Steller s expedition and telling how the complete skeleton was conserved and ended up in the Helsinki museum of natural history 63 See also edit nbsp Mammals portal nbsp Marine life portalHolocene extinction List of extinct animals of North America List of Asian animals extinct in the Holocene List of recently extinct mammals Evolution of sirenians Cuesta sea cow Takikawa sea cowReferences edit a b c Domning D 2016 Hydrodamalis gigas IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T10303A43792683 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 2 RLTS T10303A43792683 en Retrieved 17 February 2022 Shoshani J 2005 Hydrodamalis In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 92 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 Wilson D E Reeder D M eds 2005 Hydrodamalis gigas Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 92 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b Palmer Theodore S 1895 The Earliest Name for Steller s sea cow and Dugong Science 2 40 449 450 doi 10 1126 science 2 40 449 a PMID 17759916 S2CID 36945810 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Forsten Ann Youngman Phillip M 1982 Hydrodamalis gigas PDF Mammalian Species 165 1 3 doi 10 2307 3503855 JSTOR 3503855 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 20 a b c d e f Marsh Helene O Shea Thomas J Reynolds III John E 2011 Steller s sea cow discovery biology and exploitation of a relict giant sirenian Ecology and Conservation of the Sirenia Dugongs and Manatees New York New York Cambridge University Press pp 18 35 ISBN 978 0 521 88828 8 OCLC 778803577 Found The Massive Skeleton of a Steller s Sea Cow 17 November 2017 Retrieved 6 December 2017 Steller s sea cow Sunken flagship of the Bering Sea The AMIQ Institute Retrieved 6 December 2017 Skeleton of Ancient Sea Cow Found on Bering Island The Commander Islands Nature and Biosphere Reserve Named Marakov S V Retrieved 3 December 2017 Scheffer Victor B November 1972 The Weight of the Steller Sea Cow Journal of Mammalogy 53 4 912 914 doi 10 2307 1379236 JSTOR 1379236 a b Turvey S T Risley C L 2006 Modelling the extinction of Steller s sea cow Biology Letters 2 1 94 97 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2005 0415 PMC 1617197 PMID 17148336 a b c d e f g h i j Whitmore Jr Frank C Gard Jr L M 1977 Steller s Sea Cow Hydrodamalis gigas of Late Pleistocene Age from Amchitka Aleutian Islands Alaska PDF Geological Survey Professional Paper Professional Paper 1036 doi 10 3133 pp1036 a b c d e f g h i Mattioli Stefano Domning Daryl P 2006 An Annotated List of Extant Skeletal Material of Steller s Sea Cow Hydrodamalis gigas Sirenia Dugongidae from the Commander Islands Aquatic Mammals 32 3 273 288 doi 10 1578 AM 32 3 2006 273 Berta Annalisa 2012 Return to the Sea The Life and Evolutionary Times of Marine Mammals Berkeley California University of California Press p 131 ISBN 978 0 520 27057 2 OCLC 757476446 Steller described the sea cow s blubber 8 10 centimeters 3 1 3 9 in thick as a b c d Anderson P K Domning D P 2008 Perrin William F Wursig Bernd Thewissen J G M eds Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals 2nd ed San Diego California Academic Press pp 1104 1106 ISBN 978 0 12 373553 9 OCLC 262718627 Haeckel 1895 Systematische Phylogenie der Wirbelthiere Vertebrata Entwurf einer systematischen Stammesgeschichte in German Vol 3 1 ed Berlin Georg Reimer pp 142 143 Retrieved 16 July 2021 Berta A Sumich J L Kovacs K M 2015 Sirenians Marine Mammals Evolutionary Biology 3rd ed Boston Massachusetts Academic Press p 105 ISBN 978 0 12 397002 2 OCLC 953575838 The skeleton of sirenians displays both pachyostosis and osteosclerosis Takahashi S Domning D P Saito T 1986 Dusisiren dewana n sp Mammalia Sirenia a new ancestor of Steller s sea cow from the upper Miocene of Yamagata Prefecture northeastern Japan PDF Transactions and Proceedings of the Paleontological Society of Japan New Series 141 296 321 the phalanges were even more reduced and possibly even completely lost in Steller s sea cow a b c d e Sharko F S Boulygina E S et al 2021 Steller s sea cow genome suggests this species began going extinct before the arrival of Paleolithic humans Nature Communications 12 2215 2215 Bibcode 2021NatCo 12 2215S doi 10 1038 s41467 021 22567 5 PMC 8044168 PMID 33850161 Loker Eric Hofkin Bruce 2015 Parasitology A Conceptual Approach New York New York Taylor and Francis Group p 293 ISBN 978 0 8153 4473 5 OCLC 929783662 WoRMS World Register of Marine Species Cyamus rhytinae J F Brandt 1846 www marinespecies org Retrieved 2021 08 19 Carlton J T Geller J B Reaka Kudla M L Norse E A 1999 Historical Extinctions in the Sea PDF Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics 30 523 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 30 1 515 JSTOR 221694 Syrenocyamus rhytinae was recorded from the Steller s Sea Cow cyamid amphipods are known only from whales and dolphins and have never since Steller been recorded in sirenians a b c d Estes James A Burdin Alexander Doak Daniel F 2016 Sea otters kelp forests and the extinction of Steller s sea cow Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 113 4 880 885 Bibcode 2016PNAS 113 880E doi 10 1073 pnas 1502552112 PMC 4743786 PMID 26504217 a b Bullen Cameron D Campos Alberto A Gregr Edward J McKechnie Iain Chan Kai M A 2021 The ghost of a giant Six hypotheses for how an extinct megaherbivore structured kelp forests across the North Pacific Rim Global Ecology and Biogeography 30 10 2101 2118 doi 10 1111 geb 13370 hdl 1828 13817 ISSN 1466 8238 S2CID 238770019 Springer M Signore A V Paijmans J L A Velez Juarbe J Domning D P Bauer C E He K Crerar L Campos P F Murphy W J Meredith R W Gatesy J Willerslev E MacPhee R D Hofreiter M Campbell K L 2015 Interordinal gene capture the phylogenetic position of Steller s sea cow based on molecular and morphological data and the macroevolutionary history of Sirenia Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 91 10 178 193 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2015 05 022 PMID 26050523 a b Furusawa Hitoshi 2004 A phylogeny of the North Pacific Sirenia Dugongidae Hydrodamalinae based on a comparative study of endocranial casts Paleontological Research 8 2 91 98 doi 10 2517 prpsj 8 91 S2CID 83992432 Domning D P 1978 Sirenian evolution in the North Pacific Ocean Vol 118 Berkeley California University of California Publications in Geological Sciences pp 1 176 ISBN 978 0 520 09581 6 OCLC 895212825 Hydrodamalinae Fossilworks Retrieved 12 March 2017 from the Paleobiology Database a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint postscript link Rainey W E Lowenstein J M Sarich V M Magor D M 1984 Sirenian molecular systematics including the extinct Steller s sea cow Hydrodamalis gigas Naturwissenschaften 71 11 586 588 Bibcode 1984NW 71 586R doi 10 1007 BF01189187 PMID 6521758 S2CID 28213762 Marsh Helene 1989 Chapter 57 Dugongidae PDF Fauna of Australia Vol 1B Canberra Australia CSIRO ISBN 978 0 644 06056 1 OCLC 27492815 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 11 a b Domning Daryl P 1978 An Ecological Model for Late Tertiary Sirenian Evolution in the North Pacific Ocean Systematic Zoology 25 4 352 362 doi 10 2307 2412510 JSTOR 2412510 Steller G W 1988 Frost O W ed Journal of a Voyage with Bering 1741 1742 Translated by Engel M A Frost O W Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 2181 3 OCLC 877954975 a b Frost Orcutt William 2003 Shipwreck and Survival Bering The Russian Discovery of America New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press pp 262 264 ISBN 978 0 300 10059 4 OCLC 851981991 Look no hands Steller s sea cow The Guardian Science Animal magic 25 March 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2017 a b c d Stejneger L H 1936 Georg Wilhelm Steller the Pioneer of Alaskan Natural History Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 1 623 ISBN 978 0 576 29124 8 OCLC 836920902 a b c d Buechner E 1891 Nordischen Seekuh Memoirs of the Imperial Academy of St Petersburg Science in German 38 7 1 24 a b c Crerar Lorelei D Crerar Andrew P Domning Daryl P Parsons E C M 2014 Rewriting the history of an extinction was a population of Steller s sea cows Hydrodamalis gigas at St Lawrence Island also driven to extinction Biology Letters 10 11 20140878 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2014 0878 PMC 4261872 PMID 25428930 Derbeneva Olga A Sukernik Rem I Volodko Natalia V Hosseini Seyed H Lott Marie T Wallace Douglas C 2002 Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in the Aleuts of the Commander Islands and Its Implications for the Genetic History of Beringia American Journal of Human Genetics 71 2 415 421 doi 10 1086 341720 PMC 379174 PMID 12082644 In 1825 1826 the Russian American company transferred Aleut families from Attu Island the westernmost of the Aleutian chain as well as from Atka Andreyanov Islands to the Commanders a b c d Anderson Paul K July 1995 Competition Predation and the Evolution and Extinction of Steller s Sea Cow Hydrodamalis gigas Marine Mammal Science 11 3 391 394 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 1995 tb00294 x MacDonald Stephen O Cook Joseph A 2009 Recent Mammals of Alaska Fairbanks Alaska University of Alaska Press pp 57 58 ISBN 978 1 60223 047 7 OCLC 488523994 Furusawa H Kohno N 1994 Steller s sea cow Sirenia Hydrodamalis gigas from the Middle Pleistocene Mandano Formation of the Boso Peninsula central Japan Japanese Paleontological Society in Japanese 56 doi 10 14825 kaseki 56 0 26 Corbett D G Causey D Clemente M Koch P L Doroff A Lefavre C West D 2008 Aleut Hunters Sea Otters and Sea Cows Human Impacts on Ancient Marine Ecosystems University of California Press pp 43 76 doi 10 1525 9780520934290 005 ISBN 978 0 520 93429 0 JSTOR 10 1525 j ctt1pphh3 OCLC 929645577 S2CID 226791158 a b c d Domning Daryl P Thomason James Corbett Debra G 2007 Steller s sea cow in the Aleutian Islands Marine Mammal Science 23 4 976 983 doi 10 1111 j 1748 7692 2007 00153 x a b Savinetsky A B Kiseleva N K Khassanov B F 2004 Dynamics of sea mammaland bird populations of the Bering Sea region over the last several millennia Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 209 1 4 335 352 Bibcode 2004PPP 209 335S doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2004 02 009 Ellis Richard 2004 No Turning Back The Life and Death of Animal Species New York New York Harper Perennial p 134 ISBN 978 0 06 055804 8 OCLC 961898476 Haycox Stephen W 2002 Alaska An American Colony Seattle Washington University of Washington Press pp 55 144 ISBN 978 0 295 98249 6 OCLC 49225731 Each year one or more vessels left Okhotsk or Petropavlosk on Kamchatka for hunting trips to the Aleutian islands Typically the ships would sail to the Commander Islands where they would spend some time slaughtering and preserving the mat of Steller s rhytina a sea cow Jones Ryan T September 2011 A Havock Made among Them Animals Empire and Extinction in the Russian North Pacific 1741 1810 Environmental History 16 4 585 609 doi 10 1093 envhis emr091 JSTOR 23049853 Salomon Anne K Tanape Nick M Huntington Henry P September 2007 Serial depletion of marine invertebrates leads to the decline of a strongly interacting grazer Ecological Applications 17 6 1752 1770 doi 10 1890 06 1369 1 ISSN 1051 0761 PMID 17913138 Bullen Cameron David 2020 A marine megafaunal extinction and its consequences for kelp forests of the North Pacific open library ubc ca Thesis doi 10 14288 1 0391881 Retrieved 2021 08 19 Silverberg R 1973 The Dodo the Auk and the Oryx London United Kingdom Puffin Books p 83 ISBN 978 0 14 030619 4 OCLC 473809649 Berzin A A Tikhomirov E A Troinin V I 2007 1963 Translated by Ricker W E Ischezla li Stellerova korova Was Steller s sea cow exterminated PDF Priroda 52 8 73 75 Bertram C Bertram K 1964 Does the extinct sea cow survive New Scientist 24 415 313 Littlepage Dean Steller s Island Adventures of a Pioneer Naturalist in Alaska Crerar L D Freeman E W Domning D P Parsons E C M 2017 Illegal Trade of Marine Mammal Bone Exposed Simple Test Identifies Bones of Mermaid Ivory or Steller s Sea Cow Hydrodamalis gigas Frontiers in Marine Science 3 272 doi 10 3389 fmars 2016 00272 S2CID 35462508 Korsun S A 2013 Fieldwork on the Commander Islands Aleuts PDF Alaska Journal of Anthropology 11 1 2 169 181 Kipling Rudyard 1894 The White Seal The Jungle Books ISBN 978 0 585 00499 0 OCLC 883570362 Kipling Rudyard 2013 1894 Nagai Kaori ed The Jungle Books Penguin UK p 405 ISBN 978 0 14 196839 1 OCLC 851153394 Tales of a Sea Cow 2012 IMDb Retrieved 20 January 2017 Etienne de France Tales of a Sea Cow Exhibition at Parco Arte Vivente Torino Italy alan shapiro com Archived from the original on 2014 05 02 Retrieved 2014 05 01 Bureaud Annick Tales of a Sea Cow A Fabulatory Science Story PDF Retrieved August 19 2016 Bronnikov Andrei 2009 Species Evanescens in Russian Reflections ISBN 978 90 79625 02 4 OCLC 676724013 Sebald W G Nach der Natur Sebald in German Hanser Literaturverlage Retrieved 19 January 2017 Turpeinen Iida Elolliset in Finnish Schildts amp Soderstroms Retrieved 6 January 2023 Further reading editSteller Georg W 2011 1751 The Manatee In Miller Walter ed De Bestiis Marinis Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska pp 13 43 ISBN 978 1 295 08525 5 OCLC 867637409 Steller G W 1925 Appendix A Topographical and Physical Description of Bering Island which Lies in the Eastern Sea off the Coast of Kamchatka PDF In Golder F A ed Steller s Journal of the Sea Voyage from Kamchatka to America and Return on the Second Expedition 1741 1742 Bering s Voyages An Account of the Efforts of the Russians to Determine the Relation of Asia and America Vol II Translated by Stejneger Leonhard New York New York American Geographical Society p 207 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hydrodamalis gigas nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Hydrodamalis gigas Animal Diversity Web Steller s sea cow information from the BBC Summary of the research history done on Steller s sea cow Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Steller 27s sea cow amp oldid 1203127758, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.