We are
thrilled to announce our Christmas Sealabration auction for 2023! Not only do
we have some fantastic and one-of-a-kind items for you to bid on, but we are
also very excited as this is our first auction to feature vouchers for
unique experience activities (very kindly donated by local and existing
partners). Make your money multitask this Christmas - you treat
yourself or a loved one to goodies, the local maker/company gets validation for
their efforts, we train marine conservation leaders, and you get to support
marine conservation - WIN WIN WIN
WIN!
Seal
Research Trust (SRT) is a multi-award winning, evidence-based marine
conservation charity. What we do really works. We support a large network of
active citizen scientists across SW communities, who routinely survey seals on
their local patch. This gives seals a voice and enables us to protect them and
their ocean home.
Seals face
many ocean challenges, yet we all depend on them to balance our marine
ecosystem. This is essential to make the oxygen we breathe. Seals are our
globally rare wildlife tourist attraction, helping diversify coastal economic
prosperity.
Each seal
has a unique fur pattern that enables it to be photo identified throughout its
life. Learn the pattern and you can recognise the seal! SRT hold identification
catalogues for numerous sites from Somerset round to Hampshire.
Meet four
of our seals:
·
GHOST. A world record breaking mum – 18 pups in 19
years on exactly the same beach bar the first and last!
·
LUCKY BUNTING. Seriously injured by entanglement,
we rescued her, giving her a second chance – she has since had her first (on a
public beach) and second pup (on a more remote and suitable beach!).
·
LEWIS. We’ve tracked him since he was born in 2000
and discovered he commutes 285km between N Devon and SE Cornwall.
·
TULIP BELLE. First identified in 2001. She’s had 4
pups in the Isle of Man and returns to Cornwall, 450km away, in between.
Some key learning outcomes from this work have shown that most of the seals seen at sites in Cornwall just appear to be moving through – stopping off to rest on their way to somewhere else. A small proportion of seals seen at a site may remain there for several months, using the site as their base from which to forage. Very few seals (if any) spend all year in one place. Each seal seems to take a unique pathway and seals seen in Cornwall have also been identified in north and south Devon, Dorset, Somerset, the Isle of Man, Wales, France, Ireland, Belgium and Holland!