by Ram Papish
University of Alaska Press, 2009
Cloth: 978-1-60223-068-2
Library of Congress Classification PZ10.3.P22245Liw 2009

ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK

The northern fur seal spends most of its life in the open ocean of the North Pacific, from California up through Alaska and down to Japan. These seals travel hundreds of miles, farther than any other seal or sea lion, to reach their remote breeding grounds. Most fur seals go to the Pribilof Islands of Alaska, where, historically, several million fur seals converged annually, but the population counted in the Pribilofs in 2008 was less than one million and dropping rapidly. Ram Papish’s richly illustrated story follows these magnificent—and increasingly vulnerable—creatures through the most important part of their lives.



See other books on: Alaska | Juvenile fiction | Papish, Ram | Seals (Animals) | Zoology
See other titles from University of Alaska Press