While the public is barred from the end of the damaged Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf following the catastrophic collapse on Dec. 23, sea lions have continued to call the place home.
RELATED: The wharves of Santa Cruz County
According to the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary’s website, the most abundant pinniped in the sanctuary is the California sea lion.
Related Articles
Lawsuits seek to stop barred owl culling, including the Bay Area
Readers asked to help preserve important wildlife habitat on Mount Diablo
Commercial Dungeness crab season opens off Northern California
‘Gitmo’ in the Mojave: How the Marines are saving endangered desert tortoises
Nearly 140 new species confirmed in 2024 by California Academy of Sciences
The word “pinniped” means fin- or flipper-footed, and refers to the marine mammals that have front and rear flippers.
This group includes seals, sea lions and walruses, all animals that live in the ocean but can come on land for long periods of time. A minimum of 12,000 are probably present at any given time in the region.
Most creatures of this species breed on the Channel Islands off Southern California, Baja and mainland Mexico. Sea lions often congregate in herds or rafts of up to 1,500.