m CD r^ m cQ i D m a J THE FUR SEALS AND FUR-SEAL ISLANDS OF THE NORTH PACIFIC OCEAN. BY DAVID STARR JORDAN, President of Leland Stanford Jr. University, COMMISSIONER IN CHARGE OF FUR-SEAL, INVESTIGATIONS OF WITH THE FOLLOWING OFFICIAL ASSOCIATES: LEONHARD STEJNEGER and FREDERIC A. LUCAS,^ Of the U. S. National jVIuseum. JEFFERSON F. MOSER, Lieutenant-Commander, U. S. N., In Command of the U. S. Fish Commission Steamer Albatross. CHARLES H. TOWNSEND, Of the \J,. tS. FHsh C o m m^ iss ion . GEORGE A. CLARK, Secretary and Stenographer. JOSEPH MURRAY, Special Agent. WITH SPECIAL PAPERS BY OTHER CONTRIBUTORS. PART 2. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1898. CONTRIBUTORS OF PAPERS ON SPECIAL SUBJECTS. WILLIAM H. ASHMEAD, NATHAN BANKS, O. FULLER COOK, DANIEL W. COQUILLET, \VILLIAM H. DALL, \VILLIAM R. DUDLEY, HARRISON G. DYAR, ELMER E. FARMER, PIERRE A. FISH, CHARLES H. GILBERT, ALBERT HASSALL, MARTIN LINNELL, JAXIES M. MACOUN, JENNIE C. 3V1ILLER, WALTER MILLER, \VILLIAM PA.LMER, MARY J. RATHBUN, \VILLIAM E. RITTER, JOSEPH: N. ROSE, EUGENE A. SCH\VARZ, ROBERT E. SNODGRA.SS, \VILLIA1V1 A. SNOW, CHARLES W. STILES, \VILBUR \V. THOBURN, FREDERICK: \v. TRUE. PART II. OBSERVATIONS ON THK FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS, 1872-1897, AS EXTRACTED FROM THE LOG OF ST. PAUL ISLAND, AND AS RECORDED IX THE DAILY JOURNAL OF THE COMMISSION OF 1896 AND 1897. 15184, PT 2 1 251 TABLE OF CONTENTS. Introductory note 254 List of agents 256 Extracts from the log of St. Paul Island 257 Journal of observations, 1896 293 Notes by Treasury Agent Crowley 515 Journal of observations, 1897 517 Topical index 594 253 31303 INTRODUCTORY NOTE. In the following pages we have grouped together the natural history facts of the fur seals as they have been observed during the past two seasons by the members of the commission and as they are recorded in the log of St. Paul Island. During the past twenty seven years it has been the custom of the agents in charge of the fur seal islands to set down in a daily log or journal a record of current happenings and of their observations upon the seals. Mingled with a vast amount of irrelevant matter are many facts which throw light on the past condition of the herd. These facts have been extracted and are here presented in condensed form. From the voluminous record of St. Paul Island, consisting of some 2,500 closely written pages, the results are exceedingly meager. It is apparently by accident rather than by intention that the record has any value. As illustrative of its unsatisfactory nature we may cite the fact that the results of rookery inspections are regularly recorded in such phrases as these: " In a healthy condition," the "usual number of breeding seals present,'' "more" or "less" (as the case might be) ''seals than in the preceding year," etc. The record in the latter case may have been kept by another person, or may contain no definite data at all. The aim throughout has been to keep a record of the first arrival of the seals, but the record is a blank so far as their breeding habits are concerned. For the close of the season there are in many cases data fixing more or less definitely the departure of the seals. But here for the most part the record indicates that seals were present at a certain date, and we are left to guess when they actually disappeared. About all important matters there is this exasperating vagueness and uncertainty. We probably have no right to complain of this record. The agents were doubt- less not specially charged with this sort of work. They had no special training for it and its importance was not realized. But we may be pardoned for pointing out the fact that these men allowed to go to waste a most excellent opportunity to serve the interests of the Government. Had the record in the log of St. Paul Island been filled with the results of systematic observations of the rookeries, stated with some degree of mathematical exactness, it would to-day be a mine of valuable information regard- ing the past condition of the herd. The record of one year would have served as a guide to the next, and if this course had failed to bring an earlier recognition of the true condition of the herd, the record would at least enable us to-day to replace theory with positive proof in many matters of importance. We call attention to this matter at the present time chiefly because it enforces what we have already had to say regarding the need of constant and systematic study of the fur-seal herd. From the time the fur-seal herd came into the possession of the 254 INTRODUCTORY NOTE. 255 United States it should have been in charge of a competent guardian whose exclusive business it should have been to understand its condition and needs. It would then have received the attention which was so conspicuously lacking during its critical years. Supplemental to this meager record of the log and in contrast with it is the journal of the commission itself for the seasons of 1896 and 1897. This gives a minute daily record of the observations and labors of the different investigators. It begins in 1896 with the 8th of July, or as the breeding season was just approaching its height, and ends with the 22d of October, a few weeks before the final departure of the seals from the islands. In 1897 the record begins with the first arrival of the breeding females and extends until September, thus covering in the two years practically the entire period of stay of the seals on the islands and giving a duplicate record for the period known as the height of the breeding season. This record is published in full because it is the most important result of the work of investigation. It should furnish a valuable basis of comparison in subsequent investigations of the fur-seal herd. DAVID S. JORDAN. GEORGE A. CLARK. LIST OF THE TREASURY AGENTS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE RECORD IN THE LOG OF THE ISLAND OF ST. PAUL. Charles Bryant, Mar. 31, 1872, to July 31, 1893. Francis Lessen, Aug. 1, 1873, to Aug. 7, 1874. Charles Bryant, Aug. 7, 1874, to Aug. 6, 1875. William J. Mclntyre, Aug. 6, 1875, to Nov. 1, 1875. George Marston, Nov. 1, 1875, to Aug. 31, 1876. Charles Bryant, Sept. 1, 1876, to Dec. 31, 1876. J. M. Morton, May 15 to July 13, 1877. J. H. Moulton, July 14, 1877, to Apr. 30, 1878. J. M. Morton, Apr. 30, 1878, to Aug. 13, 1878. J. H. Moulton, Aug. 14, 1878, to May 27, 1879. J. W. Beaman, May 27, 1879, to July 16, 1879. H. G. Otis, July 16, 1879, to July 29, 1879. J. W. Beaman, July 29, 1879, to May 31, 1880. H. G. Otis, May 31, 1880, to July 29, 1881. J. H. Moulton, July 29, 1881, to July 28, 1882. H. A. Gliddeu, July 28, 1882, to Juno 3, 1885. G. R. Tingle, June 3, 1885, to Aug. 2, 188(5. A. P. Laud, Aug. 2, 1886, to May 31, 1887. G. R. Tingle, June 1, 1887, to Aug. 3, 1887. J. P. Manchester, Aug. 4, 1887, to May 30, 1888. G. R. Tingle, May 30, 1888, to Aug. 14, 1888. J. P. Manchester, Aug. 15, 1888, to Aug. 12, 1889. Charles J. Goff, Aug. 16, 1889, to Sept. 22, 1889. G. R. Nettleton, Sept. 23, 1889, to Aug. 6, 1890. Joseph Murray, Aug. 6, 1890, to Aug. 13, 1891. Milton Barnes, Aug. 13, 1891, to June 9, 1892. Joseph Murray, June 9, 1892, to Aug. 31, 1892. D. J. Ainsworth, Aug. 31, 1892, to June 10, 1893. Joseph Murray, June 11 to June 19, 1893. J. B. Crowley, June 20, 1893, to June 26, 1893. T. E. Adams, June 27, 1893, to June 29, 1894. James Judge, June 29, 1894, to Sept. 14, 1895. T. E. Adams, Sept. 14, 1895, to July 13, 1896.' J. B. Crowley, Oct. 21, 1896, to June 12, 1897. 1 The time intervening between the 13th of July and 21st of October, 1896, is covered by the Journal of Fur Seal Commission. 256 EXTRACTS FROM THE LOG OF ST. PAUL ISLAND, 1872-1896.1 1872. RECORD KEPT BY CHARLES BRYANT. May 5. — The seals landed 011 the Reef to-day. May 13. — A few fur seals and sea lions are reported from Northeast Point; the first of the season. May 14. — First drive of seals made for food; 227 killed. May 16. — A visit to Lukauiu and Kitovi rookeries showed a few sea bulls hauled up. There is little snow or ice on the shores. May 19. — Bulls are hauling out in small numbers on Reef rookery. A number of small males are on the point. May 20. — Seals began lauding on Na Spil rookery. May 21. — Permission was given to shoot a sea lion sleeping on the point of the Reef. Although the shooting occurred within 200 feet of the seals they paid no atten- tion to the report. May 25. — Large numbers of beach masters are landing at Northeast Point, with few bachelors as yet. May 2G. — The number of beach masters on Tolstoi rookery compares favorably with that of former years, but of killable seals there are few. May 27. — On Southwest Bay, English Bay, and Tolstoi a great number of beach masters are hauled up; but there are few young seals on the hauling grounds. May 31. — On Lukanin, Tolstoi, Kitovi, and Reef the beach masters landed com- pare favorably in number with those of former years; but the number of young killable males is small in proportion. June 1. — The first regular drive of the killing season was made from the Reef to-day; 752 were killed. June 7. — Few seals suitable for driving are reported from the Southwest and English bays. June 8. — Few seals are reported on Otter Island; on Northeast and Halfway points are an unusual number of beach masters, but very few killable seals. June 16. — Beach masters are unusually numerous on the Reef, and cows coming rapidly. Several young pups are already to be seen. June 23. — A visit to the rookeries shows an unusually large number of old bulls and many females landing; many young pups, also. July 7. — Visit to the rookeries westward shows the breeding grounds well filled, but the hauling grounds nearly cleared of killable seals. 1 Condensed from the original record, with notes, hy George A. Clark. 257 258 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. July 13. — Killed 2,319 seals1 from English Bay. Two females were killed for scientific purposes. One, a cow 4 years old, with her first pup,2 weight 51 £ pounds; the other, a very old cow which had bred many times, weight 103 pounds. The first measured 6 feet 8 inches; the other 7 feet C inches — a very large specimen.3 July 22. — A visit to the Reef showed many seals in the center of the peninsula. July 24. — A small drive from Zoltoi yielded 628 skins, and a herd from English Bay, 2,070, making a total for the year of 70,253 skins. October 2. — A herd of old bulls were driven and killed for blubber for winter use. October 28.— (Sealing for quota resumed.4) Natives drive seals for the company from English Bay, securing 1,255 skins. October 30. — Seals of killable size having left the rookeries near the village, the natives were sent to Northeast Point to try to get enough to make out the season's quota. October 31. — A herd of young pups were killed for winter food, 1,250 in all; 70 to a native family. December G. — A food drive of 426 was made from Zoltoi. This completes the supply of winter food. December 16. — Many fur seals are reported at Northeast Point. 1873. February 26. — A party of hunters killed a bull seal at Tolstoi. April 24. — A bull seal was seen in the open water off the Keef, the first this season. May 9. — One seal is reported hauled out on the shore at Southwest Bay. May 10. — A bull seal hauled for an hour on the lagoon and then went into the water again. May 11. — Three seals are reported hauled up at Gorbatch ; two or three bachelors are in the water off the point of the Reef. One seal was seen in the water at Lukanin. The shores there are obstructed with ice and snow. May 13. — A few seals are hauled on all the rookeries. May 15. — A few seals are landed at different places on the Reef and about 20 bulls and bachelors are on the point. May 16. — The shores at Southwest Bay and Tolstoi are reported obstructed with ice, and few seals landing. May 17. — About 50 beach masters have hauled at different points on the Reef; and 30 seals, partly bachelors, are gathered on the point. May 20. — On the Reef the seals were found increased considerably, being about as numerous as ten days earlier last year. Zapadni is tolerably free from snow, and quite a number of seals are hauled out. English Bay and Tolstoi are still very much encumbered by snowdrifts along the water's edge, and but few seals have landed. 1 Most of the drives at this time are noted as made in the afternoon, the seals being herded up over night and the killing occurring next day. It is noted occasionally that on account of the hont killing has had to be postponed until evening, etc. 2 Either the age of the cow or the fact of its being her first pup is at fault. The cow has her first pup at the age of 3 years. 3 These figures are manifestly incorrect. The length of the female averages about 4 feet. 4 In the terms of the original lease June, July, September, and October were designated as the months during which seals were to be killed by the lessees. RECORD OF FRANCIS LESSEN. 259 May 23. — The first food drive of the season was made to-day, killing 193. The killing was made at Zapadni, the meat being brought home in the bidara. June 3. — The first regular drive for skins was made from Zoltoi and Ileef, 813 taken ; 7 seals suffered from overheating in driving. June 7. — It is reported from Northeast Point that many beach masters are hauled out, but few killable seals. June 8. — The shores where seals breed are fast becoming free from snow, and no obstruction occurs to landing. Seals are beginning to haul rapidly at Zoltoi and other points. The first female landed at Gorbatch to-day, and the same report is given of Southwest Bay. June 11.— A drive from Southwest Bay yielded 2,597 skins; 152 skins were spoiled on account of overheating of the seals. June 17. — Snow fell in the night and drove the seals from the shores in large numbers. June 25. — A visit to Keef rookery shows the conditions very favorable as compared with last year; females are lauded in equal numbers, and many already have pups. July 23. — Four hundred and forty-six seals were killed to day, enough to fill out the season's quota. RECORD KEPT BY FRANCIS LESSEN. August 12. — On Reef rookery it was found that some of this year's pups had already learned to swim. August 14. — Off Tolstoi and English Bay a mass of pups were learning to swim, and the water was full of seals. August 20. — At Northeast Point the females and their pups were very thick on shore, as well as in the water. Comparatively few bull seals were seen, but many half bulls. The two latter classes are supposed to go out feeding about this time. September 9. — Ten or fifteen seals are reported dead at Northeast Point, cut about the chest and back; supposed to have been killed by "killers." September 18. — On Otter Island about 2,000 seals were found, but no actual rookery, because no pups were seen. It is evidently only a hauling ground for bachelors and old bulls. October 21. — An inspection of all the near rookeries showed the old seals commencing to leave. November 2. — Seals are reported to be diminishing at Northeast Point. November 3. — Young pups were driven and killed for food: the sexes were separated just back of Kitovi rookery, the females allowed to remain and the males driven up to the village; 879 were killed. November 24. — The chief reports a gradual diminution of the seals on the rookeries of Northeast and Halfway points. December 7. — On the Keef were noticed in four different places about 2,000 seals. December 15. — The seals have left Kitovi, Lukanin, and Polovina rookeries; but they still remain on both sides of the Reef. December 28. — On the Keef are still about 1,000 seals. 260 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. 1874. January 20. — Seals are reported in two places at Southwest Bay; 100 iu one and 25 in the other. January 31.— About 1,000 seals arc reported at Northeast Point on the north side; none were females, pups, or bulls; all were bachelors. Many seals were in the water. It is a surprisingly mild winter. February 10.' — Natives at Northeast Point report seals on the beach and in the water. February 21. — A few seals are iu the water at Northeast Point: 6 on shore, seem- ingly very shy, smelling the rocks, and returning soon to the water. March 1. — The chief reports seeing about 12 middle-class2 seals in the water and on the beach at Zapadni; no bulls have been seen since the beginning of January. The middle class seals have not left the island this winter — something not remembered to have occurred before by even the oldest people. March 5. — About 30 seals are reported, some in the water, some on land, at North- cast Point. A single seal is on the beach at Polovina. March 19. — Four middle class seals are reported present on Zapadni, Tolstoi, and English Bay rookeries. March 27. — Natives at Northeast Point report 10 middle-class seals in the water and on the beach near Hutchinson Hill. April 1.— The chief reports 5 seals in the water at Southwest Bay; no bulls are seen as yet. April 10. — The first large half-bull seal was seen in the water to-day at Tolstoi. April 19. — The first landing of bull seals was noted on Southwest Bay. This seems to be three weeks earlier than last year. April 23. — One bull reported landed on south side of the Reef to-day. May 1. — Two bulls have landed on Gorbatch, and several middle-sized seals are in the water. May 3. — The first bull of the season landed on Lagoon rookery to-day. May 4. — The chief reports from Southwest Bay a few seals landed on all of the western :t rookeries, especially on Zapadni, where about 200 middle-sized seals and 20 bulls are out. May 7. — Natives returning from Northeast Point report about 1,000 middle-sized seals on those rookeries, but only two bulls landed. Two bulls were seen at Polovina. May 10. — About 1,000 middle-sized seals reported in two places on Zapadni, and a large number of bulls. May 19. — (Notes from official instructions): 1. The number of fur seals from St. Paul shall hereafter be 90,000, and from St. George 10,000. 2. The time for taking seals shall extend from June 1 to August 15, and through September and October of the same year. May 23. — The western rookeries are reported in good condition, especially Xapadni, where there are a large number of bulls and about 1,000 middle-class seals hauled up. The general condition on the rookeries is about fourteen days earlier than last year. 1 The bachelor seals probably did not leave the vicinity of the islands this winter at all. 2 This term probably means bachelors of three and four years' age. :'/:ip;idni and Tolstoi. RECORD OF CHARLES BRYANT. 261 May 31. — Oil Lukaniu and Kitovi there are but few middle-sized seals. June 3. — At the first regular drive to-day from Southwest Bay 2,395 were killed, and at a second drive from the Reef 538 were killed. June 11. — On the lleef and Gorbatch the females have commenced to arrive in large numbers. Some already have their pups. June 12. — The sun came out hot at the killing to-day, and in order to save the skins the seals were driven into the lagoon to cool off. This proved to be a good move and saved many skins from spoiling. June 20. — The number of seals taken this week was 17,173, and is probably the largest ever taken on this island in a single week. The condition of all the rookeries is favorable, many females and killable seals are arriving, and the prospects for a good sealing are favorable. June 20. — A drive was made to-day from Kitovi and Lukauin. The former is a small rookery.1 About 500 seals were obtained from it, and double the number from Lukauin. July 4. — The drives made this morning both turned out badly. One of the mules ran near Lukaniu rookery and scared the seals, while the sheep did the same thing on Zoltoi. July 7. About the same number of seals as last year are on the breeding grounds of Northeast Point. Killable seals are not so numerous. Webster says that the bachelors have taken to hauling out at a new place about 2 miles away, near the big lake. July 1C. — Elliott and Maynard arrive. They visit Otter Island, seeing about 5,000 bachelors, but no breeding seals. July 17. — A drive is made from Lukanin, and 533 seals killed. This completes quota for this season, 89,993 seals. Only 130 of the 720 skins cut were rejected. This proportion of loss is exceedingly small. July 29. — A walk about the rookeries shows the arrival of many of last year's pups, and the spreading of the seals on the upland ; some of this year's pups are beginning to learn to swim in small pools near the water's edge. August 6. — The total shipment of skins for this year from Northeast Point was 34,516. RECORD KEPT BY CHARLES BRYANT. August 16. — The seals on the upland of the Reef are quite numerous, both females and young. The young show scurvy from the mud and rain. There is almost an entire absence of 3 and 4 year olds. August 17. — A drive for food was made from Zoltoi and 131 killed. About 800 seals were driven in, but only the above small number were 2-year-olds. There is but slight indication of shedding. August 18. — Went to Sea Lion (Sivutch) Eock, and found many seals and sea lions hauled out. September 9. — Seals in considerable numbers are to be seen at English Bay; at Zapadni not so many as usual are visible, and there is a scarcity of half-grown seals on all the rookeries. 1 Mr. Elliott reported 165,000 " breeding seals and young " for Kitovi rookery at this time. 262 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. September 27.— Lukaniu rookery is full of females and pups; but there are only about 200 bachelors, a great decrease over former years. October 18. — Females and young seals are to be found in numbers on the uplands of Reef rookery. October ID. — The seals having left Zoltoi, it was necessary to go to the Keel' for a drive for food; 176 seals were killed, of which 57 were stagy. November 13.— A drive of 87 more pups was made from Gorbatch, making a total of 4,897 pups for the winter food supply. December 11. — A large number of seals suitable for killing reported on the point of the Reef. Many sea lions on Sea Lion (Sivutch) Bock. 1875. January 19. — A few seals are on the rocks, and several groups in the water, about a thousand in all, between Tolstoi and English Bay. January 20. — The rookeries of Northeast Point show small groups of seals on the rocks and in the water, about 000 or 700 in all. February 10. — Several small groups of seals are reported on the shore and in the water at Northeast Point. Many sea lions also; the stomachs of two killed contained recently taken codfish. ' February 15. — Men were sent to Northeast Point to kill some of the seals to determine whether and on what they had been feeding. The contents of the stomachs of six was too far decomposed to permit of identification, beyond the fact that kelp or sea cabbage was present.2 February 18. — An inspection of the Reef showed but one seal; several heads were found showing where someone had recently killed seals and carried their bodies away. February 20. — There are no seals on Lukauin. The carcasses of about 70 pups were found, that had evidently been killed in November by stealth with a view of secreting their meat.:> March 17. — Fifty or 60 seals are reported at Northeast Point; 16 were killed for fresh meat, the winter supply of seal meat having spoiled on account of warm weather. March 31. — Two fur seals are reported off the Reef. April 5. — No seals are in sight on the Reef, though it is time for them to arrive. April 11. — Two seals are reported in the water at Zapadni. April 15. — Fifty seals were seen in the water off the Reef, showing no disposition to laud. One old bull recounoitered the shore from the point to Gorbatch and back deliberately and then returned to the group playing in the water off the Point. April 20. — Two polosikatchi, or half bull seals, are reported on the rocks at Tolstoi Point. April 22. — Quite a number of seals are in the water about the Reef, but none attempting to land. May 2. — Three bulls and 200 bachelors hauled out at Southwest Bay; 2 bulls at Tolstoi, 1 at Lukanin. 1 Probably pollack. 2 This is probably a mistake, or if the kelp were present, that it was swallowed by accident. I'rob.-ibly the bodies of pups, killed in the drives for food in the fall, which had not been removed. See record under date of November 1, 3, and 6, 1879. RECORD OF CHARLES BRYANT. 263 May 6. — A food drive from Southwest Bay of 600 or 700 animals was made; G seals killed on the ground were brought home in the bidara; the others were driven slowly to the village. May 10. — On the Reef about 20 bulls are hauled out; a few bulls are reported at Northeast Point and on other rookeries. May 16. — On the Reef, about 100 bulls are hauled out; also a small body of holostiaki. In the afternoon 60 bulls were found on Lnkanin; several hundred seals are reported at Zapadni, English Bay, and Tolstoi. June 1. — The first regular drive of the season was made to-day from Tolstoi and Zapadni; Tolstoi furnished 203, Zapadni 1,201. June 3. — Bulls are plentiful on the Beef, but the killable seals few; the same condition exists at Lukanin. June 7. — Two females have lauded at Gorbatch, the first of the season. June 10. — An inspection of Lukaniu and Reef rookeries showed the conditions to be less favorable than in former years; the bulls are not up to the former standard. The reserves are wholly wanting,1 except on the upper part of the Reef, and there are very few holostiaki. The number of females is about equal to former years, and at Gorbatch are two young pups, apparently 2 days old. June 20. — On Tolstoi the bulls were found occupying the breeding grounds in full numbers, while the reserves2 were more limited; several small groups of females had landed, and a considerable number of holostiaki are hauled out on Tolstoi and English Bay beaches. Ou Lukanin the same conditions exist, except that there are fewer bachelors. June 23. — Complaint having been made that women gathering wood at Southwest Bay disturbed the seals, orders were given to keep away from the hauling grounds. June 26. — A drive from Zapadni yielded 3,943 skins. Eleven skins were lost from overheating of the seals on the drive. June 28. — An examination of the Reef shows that the breeding places are fully occupied by the bulls, while the reserves are less than in former years. Lukanin rookery shows the same conditions. July 6. — The rookeries of Northeast Point show a full stock of breeding bulls but a scarcity of reserves on the upland. The number of females indicates either a later hauling or diminished numbers, while the stock of young breeding bulls to mature for the next two years is very small; in fact, below the number necessary for the insurance of the full supply needed. Yearling seals are arriving in full numbers, compared with former years. July 10. — A drive from Lukanin yielded 1,108. This drive shows that about half the seals now on the rookeries are yearlings or small 2-year-olds. (It was noted in connection with the drive of July 8, in an erasure, that the number of seals killed was 50 per cent of the drive.) An examination of the rookery showed it to be well filled with females. A less number of beach masters were with them than formerly; while the reserves of old males on the uplands and the half bulls along the shore appear 1 The observations of the season of 1897 show this to be natural; the idle and reserve bulls, as a class, do not arrive until later. 2 Compare record under date of June 10. IUJ 264 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. considerably less than formerly, and apparently less than sufficient.1 The 1 and 2 \ -car olds are fully represented. July 10.— The sealing season is practically over; the remaining skins will be taken for food. July 23.— The schooner San Diego was captured off Otter Island by the Treasury agent in a whaleboat. She had 1,660 skins and 15 tons of salt on board. July 25.— the Reef was thoroughly examined, and the bulls on the breeding ground were found diminished2 on account of heat and exhaustion. The reserves had nearly all gone to take their places. The show of half bulls is less than on former years. Most of the females are absent, partly from effect of bright sunshine, but the number of pups affords ample evidence of the regular annual increase, though the average time of the landing of cows this year has been about ten days later than former years. There is a full number of 1 and 2 year olds present, but of the 3-year-olds 3 and 5-year- olds there is a decrease on former years. All the indications are that more have been killed than should have been and allow a sufficient number to escape to make a full supply of breeding males.4 August 4. — The Eeef rookeries are broken up and many seals of all classes are on the upland. The bulls have mostly left the breeding grounds. A full supply of 1 and 2 year olds, but a scarcity of 3, 4,5 and 5 year olds. August 6. — Zapadni rookery is in a good condition, showing a fair proportion of killable seals.6 Lukanin rookery is in a fair condition as compared with former years. RECORD KEPT BY WILLIAM J. McINTYRE. August 10. — Owing to the heat few killable seals and females are on Lukanin and Kitovi rookeries. August 11. — The seals on Reef rookery are reported in diminished numbers, due to heat. August 21. — Two albino pups were brought from Zapadni. The bodies were a rich cream color, the eyes and flippers pink, but in every other respect they were like the ordinary pup. August 24. — Tolstoi, Holm (Middle Hill), and Zapadni rookeries are lessening in population ; few bulls are present. August 30. — The hauling ground of Otter Island was found to contain 1,500 bachelors. There is no rookery on the island. The island is 4,000 feet long with a 1 If there was an actual scarcity, which the history of the succeeding years does not bear out, it is traceable to the effects of the close killing of 1868, when practically all males were taken. We can not, however, accept as more than mere opinions these statements regarding the scarcity of males. If definite figures had been given it would be different. : This is a regular phenomenon of the breeding grounds. After July 25 the old bulls begin to withdraw and the idle and young bulls enter the breeding grounds. It will be noted here that there are reserve bulls to take the places of the regular beach masters. •'The scarcity of 3-year-olds is not unnatural after the quota of 100,000 has been taken. 4 See same record for 1896, and compare with that of 1877 showing proportion of bulls rejected in the drives. From the irregular and uncertain movements of the bachelors it is plain that no defi- nite clrtrrmination of their relative condition from year to year can be made. Their movements are governed largely by the state of the weather. The subsequent record shows no dearth of breeding males when the reserves of this year came to enter the rookeries in 1880. 5 See note 2 under date of July 25. "Compare statement under date of August 4. RECORD OF GEORGE MARSTON. 265 mean width of 1,200 feet, equal to 105.1 acres. The westward clift's are bold, attaining a height of 350 feet. October 21. — A large school of "killers" was observed near East Landing. RECORD KEPT BY GEORGE MARSTON. November 6. — The natives were informed that the number of pups to be killed for food would have to be cut down to 3,000, as it had been too large. This was objected to, and a compromise placed the number at 3,800. November 11. — The total of pups killed for the year was 3,745. November 16. — A drive of seals for food was made from Tolstoi, where they were found in good numbers. A number of old bulls got into the drive.1 November 21. — There are a good number of seals on Keef rookery ; a few old bulls. November 27. — A visit to Lukanin showed but a few seals there. November 30. — The seals have gone from the Keef. December 29. — Natives returning from Northeast Point report 2,000 seals still there. 1876. January 15. — Seals were seen to-day in the water off East Landing. March 12.2 — Four or 5 seals were reported in the water off North Shore. April 27. — The native chief reports 2 seals in the water off the Eeef. March 3. — The chief reports 2 old bulls hauled out at the Reef this morning, the first seen this season. May 5. — While walking about the Reef 13 old bulls were seen — 8 hauled out and 5 in the water. May 17. — The first bull came on Na Spil rookery to-day. Quite a number of old bulls are 011 the different rookeries. They begin growling and snapping at each other, " acting as if at home." June 1. — On the Reef are a goodly number of bulls, but few holostiaki. The rookery appears now about the same as it did last year ten days earlier. June 2. — About 500 holostiaki have hauled out at Southwest Bay and many old bulls are on the rookery. June 3. — First drive for skins from Southwest Bay; 836 animals were killed. June 4. — Captain Bryant, after a visit to all the rookeries, concludes they are just about ten days later than last year. June 5. — The first female of the season came to Na Spil to-day; the old bulls had a hard fight for her. June 6. — A drive was made from the Reef and 673 seals killed. From the above drive 80 were turned back, some able-bodied males, some that will be able for duty in a year or two,3 and some yearlings too small. June 14. — Captain Bryant made a visit to the Reef and found about 200 bachelors on the point, 100 on the south side, and some 200 on Zoltoi. Five females were landed in the bight on Gorbatch. About 20 per cent less bulls are on the breeding grounds than at the same date last year. In the afternoon a visit was made to Kitovi and 'In this note we have proof of the return of the old bulls after feeding. -Evidently the bachelor seals have not left the vicinity of the islands this winter. 3 See reference to scarcity of reserves in preceding year, July 10 and 25. 266 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. Lukanin and but few bachelors were found. Thirty per cent ' less bulls are present than were out at this time last year. June 23.— Captain Bryant found quite a number of females on Tolstoi and many 1 and 2 year old seals along the different rookeries about the bay. He thought there was a lack of bulls. June 25. — A party of natives were sent to drive off the seals on Otter Island. About 5,000 were driven off'. On the 18th 2,000 were driven off. June 26.— A drive from Zoltoi gave 862 seals. A raid was made to-day on Otter Island ; 370 seals were killed. July 10.— A drive from Tolstoi yielded 2,039 seals. Several schooners are shoot- ing seals about the island.2 July 29.— A drive from Zoltoi gave 1,040 skins. The average of seals killed to the whole drive was 12 per cent,1' the others being mostly yearlings. August 1. — A drive of seals from Lukaniu gave 1,538 good skins; the drive was large, but only 7 per cent of them were fit to kill, the greater part being last year's pups. August 2.— The drive from Tolstoi and Middle Hill yielded 2,139 seals. This drive was much better than yesterday's, yielding 40 per cent.4 Sealing was closed for the season. August 17. — A drive for food was made from Kitovi and 134 killed; 5 stagy. A large number of females were found hauled with the bachelors. August 23.— A drive for food from Kitovi yielded 207 good and 7 stagy skins. About 25 per cent of the drive was over one year old and no females were mixed in. RECORD KEPT BY CHARLES BRYANT. September 10. — A visit to Reef and Lukaniu showed a large number of seals, mostly pups and yearlings. The pups seem to be twenty days to one month behind last year and to have suffered from the bad weather of the past month. October 7. — At a drive for food from Zoltoi, 133 seals were killed, all stagy. Exam- ination of the rookeries shows that the pups are hovering on the uplands; a large number have not yet begun to shed their pup hair.5 There are very few bulls on the shores and those mostly yearlings. October 14. — A visit to the Reef showed pups in good numbers on the uplands. They seem smaller in size for this time of year than they should be, and backward about shedding their first hair. Few females are on the shore. Only a few holostiaki are on the lower end of the Reef. 'These references to redaction of bulls can only be conjectures. They doubtless form a con- tinuation of the conditions depicted by Captain Bryant the year preceding. See notes date of July 10, 2.">, etc., 1875, and record for 1877 ff. 2 It is evident from this that irregular pelagic sealing was carried on prior to 1883 in Bering Sea. 3 This must be an error, as the drive would under these circumstances have numbered 8,600. In the note of August 1 a similar but more striking error occurs, since the average of seals killed would make the drive number 21,900 seals, which would be, impossible. 4 The reference here and under date of August 23 would seem to indicate the appearance of fresh seals, making it likely that the earlier scarcity of these seals was due to temporary causes. 5 The natives are said to have reported that the sea birds they shot late in November were late also in shedding their feathers. That many black pups should be found at this time is not strange. Such pups were to be seen after the middle of October in 1896. They merely represent belated births. RECORD OP CHARLES BRYANT. 267 October 31. — A drive for food from Tolstoi gave 163 seals, all stagy. The drive contained a good proportion of 5 and 6 year olds l with a few females. November 12. — It took the sea-lion drive six days to come down from Northeast Point; 188 were killed. November 15. — Pups were driven from Kitovi and Lukanin for food; only 400 were obtained. The earlier-born pups have left the island. November 16. — Pups were driven from the south side of the Reef and 1,172 taken. November 17. — Another drive from the Eeef gave 1,172. November 19. — The Eeef was redriveu2 and 706 were obtained. These must have come ashore since the former drives. November 22. — An attempt to drive pups from Tolstoi failed on account of their having left. Keports from Zapadni show a few young seals there. Females without pups are on the shore and quite a number of bachelors are on the hauling ground of Tolstoi. November 23. — Men were sent to Zapadni to drive pups, but they were nil gone and holostiaki had to be driven instead. This is the first time since the transfer of the islands to the United States that there has been difficulty in getting the young seals, there usually being considerable numbers late in December.3 The theory of the natives is that the greater mass of young seals (pups) were driven into the water during the severe snowstorm and gale on the 30th of October, and that they were unable to find the shore again and had gone away, while their mothers, being stronger and better able, returned to the shore without them.4 November 29. —A visit to the Eeef shows that most of the females have gone and that there are only a few bachelors on the point. December 2. — Eeports from Northeast Point show very few seals there. It is plain that the seals have left the island about a month earlier than usual.5 December 9. — A visit to Tolstoi discloses the fact that there are 200 or 300 seals hauled up there. December 13. — A food drive is made from Tolstoi ; 825 are taken ; a few are stagy. The entire drove contained about 5 per cent of half bulls,6 50 per cent of 2, 3, and 4 year olds, and the remainder yearlings. An examination of Eeef rookery shows a few seals in the water, but none on shore; a few hundred are on Sea Lion Eock. Eeports from Northeast Point and other rookeries show that the seals have nearly all left the island. December 21.7 — A few seals are reported at Northeast Point. 1 See reference to scarcity of young bulls under earlier dates for the year. 2 This and the two preceding entries are interesting as showing the effect of disturbance on the rookeries. 3 The records of other years show that it was usual for the pups to leave with their mothers in the first half of November. It is therefore not strange that they should be wanting in the latter part of November. 4 Captain Bryant observes, in this connection, that Kitovi and Lnkanin rookeries would ordinarily have furnished the required 4,000 or 5,000 pups — male pups, of course. This gives some index to the size of the rookeries then, their yield being about 10,000 pups. Captain Bryant remarks also that we may expect a larger proportion of the pups to be lost at sea. The thought seems never to have occurred to him that the slaughter of the pups so earnestly sought for food tended to still further diminish them. As a matter of fact no scarcity of killable seals was noted from this cause in 1879, when the quota must have been made up of these pups. fi See later entries in the log showing the return of the seals. * See earlier notes on scarcity of young bulls. 7 No further record is made in the Journal until May 15. 15184, PT 2 2 268 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. 1877. RECORD KEPT BY J. M. MORTON. May 16. No bachelor seals are to be seen on the rookeries; 2 sea lions are on Sea Lion Rock. May 17.— The first seal appears at Village Hill (Spilki) rookery. May 21. — The chief reports about 60 bachelor seals at Reef Point. May 22.— Two bulls land at Village Hill (Spilki) rookery; a drive of 320 seals is made from the Reef for food. May 23.— Natives return from Otter Island and report no seals. May 20. — Northeast Point shows 60 young seals hauled out; 34 sea lions are driven; the sea lion cows are beginning to give birth to the pups. May 30. — Several hundred young seals are hauled out at Halfway Point. May 31. — About 300 young seals are at Reef Point. June 3. — Apparently about 800 young seals are at Southwest Bay. June 4. — Of the animals driven to day, 14£ per cent were allowed to escape, being undersized; 5 per cent1 were 5 and 6 year animals. June 5.— The drive to-day consisted mainly of 3 and 4 year olds; 6 per cent were allowed to escape, being 5 and 6 year animals; 0£ per cent were small. June 6. — Many "killers" were seen to-day, and several seals bear evidence of having been attacked by them. June 7. — No young seals are on the Reef and a scarcity of this class is reported at Northeast Point. June 0. — Of the seals driven to-day 15 per cent, large and small, were allowed to return to the water. Nine females are seen at Lukanin, being the first reported this year. June 11. — A house is being built on Otter Island as a residence for a lieutenant and two sailors, who are to guard that island.2 June 12. — Of animals driven to-day about 20 per cent were too small, and allowed to return to the water; of the rejected 7 per cent were of 5 years and upward. RECORD KEPT BY J. H. MOULTON. June 13. — Of the animals driven to-day most were 3, 4 and 5 year olds; about 30 percent were allowed to escape, 12 to 20 per cent being aged 5 years and upward. June 14. — Of the drive to-day 20 per cent were undersized; 10 per cent were of 5 years and upward.3 July 20. — The young seals (pups) are hauling out by themselves; the cows are off in the water. August 4. — The skins from Northeast Point (20,348) were shipped to-day. Thetotal from St. Paul for the year is 60,526; from the two islands, 75,526.4 1 With this and subsequent entries compare the statement of Captain Bryant regarding the scarcity of bulls in the rookeries during the past two seasons. We are forced to conclude that Captain Bryant's are merely erroneous conjectures. 2So persistent had been the attempts to raid this island that, on account of its isolated position, it was deemed necessary to station a guard there. :1 It is probable that these figures were taken with a view to refuting Captain Bryant's statements in 1875 and 1876 regarding the scarcity of males for breeding purposes, and they effectually do so. 4 The reduction in the <|iiota was voluntary on the part of the lessees. RECORD OF J. M. MORTON. 269 August 10. — Not more than 15 or 20 seals are reported on Otter Island to-day. August 27. — Lieutenant Rogers reports no seals on Otter Island. October 13. — A great change has taken place in the appearance of the seal rookeries within a few days past. The large seals are in the water and the small ones are hauled out on the water's edge. October 24. — A food drive was made to-day and 140 killed, all stagy.1 November 8. — The natives began to drive pup seals for food. November 12. — Driving of pups for winter food was completed, a total of 5,007 pups having been killed. December 25. — Several thousand seals are reported hauled up on Sea Lion Rock. 1878. January 4. — Great numbers of seals are still in the water about the island and on Sea Lion Bock. January 15.2 — The natives report large numbers of seals in the water about the islands. RECORD KEPT BY J. M. MORTON. May 1. — The first seal was seen in the water to-day. May 6. — Two bull seals and two sea lions are reported at Northeast Point. May 7. — Snow and ice still prevent the free lauding of seals. May 9. — Two bulls are on Gorbatch rookery. May 11. — Four bulls are reported on Gorbatch; 2 at Reef; 1 at Kitovi; 1 at Lagoon; several at Zapadui. May 19. — Seals are killed for food on Sea Lion Rock, 206 in all. May 26. — At Reef Point from 200 to 300 bachelors are hauled out. May 29. — The first seals arrive at Zoltoi to day. June 5. — Observations on Gorbatch rookery show that the bulls are appearing somewhat behind time. June 8. — Driving for the quota was begun to-day from the Reef; 21 percent were rejected as too small and about 5 per cent as too big — five years and upward. June 10. — Three cows were seen at Lukauin, the first for this season. June 18. — The quota of 82,000 skins was completed to-day. RECORD KEPT BY J. H. MOULTON. August 31. — The month has been unusually wet. The seal rookeries and grounds, however, present about the same appearance this year as at the end of August last year. October 18. — A drove of 125 sea lions were killed for food. October 31. — The small seals are leaving in schools everyday. No bachelor seals sire to be seen on the hauling grounds of this end of the islands. November 1. — Food drives of pups begun. 1 Attention is directed here and elsewhere throughout this record to the waste involved in thus killing seals while their skins were in a condition unsuitable for use. In the same connection should be noted the waste of the pups as indicated by the record for November 12. 2 No further record until May 1. 270 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PBIBILOF ISLANDS. November 8.— A final drive of 571 pups was made from Zoltoi and Eeef. The total number of pups killed was 5,206, the increase over last year being allowed because of the absence of bachelors. November 9. — A few cows and pups are still to be seen on the several rookeries. November 30. — The mouth of November has been warm. A few thousand seals are to be seen on the islands at various points; 300 or 400 are hauled out on Sea Lion Bock. December 17. — Seals in large numbers are to be seen daily on the islands and in the water. December 31. — A few hundred seals are hauled out on Sea Lion Rock and hundreds are in the water on all sides of the island. 1879. January 21. — A few hundred seals are hauled out on Sea Lion Rock, and a few are seen nearly every day on all sides of the island in the water. April 29. — One seal is out on Zoltoi and 1 on Reef rookery; a number are in the water on both sides of the village. May 3.— Chief reports bulls on all rookeries except Tolstoi and Polovina. May 9. — Bulls are arriving in large numbers daily; 16 are already on Lukanin ; 15 bachelors are hauled out near Tolstoi, and quite a number can be seen on Sea Lion Rock. May 15. — The chief reports many bulls on all the rookeries; about 50 bachelors are at Southwest Bay. May 16. — The chief reports many bulls at Northeast Point. RECORD KEPT BY J. W. BEAMAN. May 31.— The quota is fixed for the year at 80,000 from St. Paul, 20,000 from St. George. June 2. — The first regular drive was made to-day from Reef, 162 skins. Seals are appearing in considerable numbers on all the rookeries. A visit to Village rookery (Spilki) showed numerous bulls. June 7. — Of the seals driven yesterday from 25 to 33£ per cent were released, being under or over size, or choice individuals for breeders. June 10. — The rookery at Halfway Point (Polovina) shows a couple of thousand bulls hauled out waiting for cows, which begin to come up in small numbers.1 The bulls are fearless, and passing along the herd within 40 paces failed to create any considerable alarm. Bachelors, cows, and yearlings are mingled with the bulls in the proportion of not more than 1 to 10 on the breeding rookery. June 12. — The Reef is well covered with bulls for this time of the year; they maintain their positions with obstinacy. June 18. — A pup was seen near the village. June 20. — There are 23 bulls' on Nah Speel (Spilki) rookery, 2 cows, and 1 pup. The first cow was seen on the 16th; its pup was noticed on the morning of the 18th. 1 This statement is significant. At this date certainly the full quota of harem masters were present, and wr arc informed that there are 2,000 of them. Mr. Elliott in 1874 ascribed fully 10,000 bulls to this area, or 300,000 "breeding seals and young." •This figure should be contrast''1 with Elliott's estimate for 1874 of 260 breeding families for this rookery. RECORD OF J. W. BEAMAN 271 June 23. — A drive from Middle Hall and Tolstoi yielded 2,300 skins; about 25 per cent of the drove were released. More cows are out on Nali Speel rookery. June 24.— A drive was made from Southwest Bay and 1,822 skins taken. A walk along the driveway showed that many seals had fallen out on account of the heat and the length of the drive. July 2. — At the drive from Lukanin and Zoltoi, 1,885 skins were taken; about 25 per cent were released1 on account of the size, being 5-year-olds and upward. July 4. — Cows are still arriving on Nah Speel (Spilki) rookery; about 80 per cent have pups. July 9. — We found on passing around the Lagoon the bodies of numerous dead seals with fur on, probably 100.2 July 10. — The bad weather of the week has driven the seals from the hauling grounds so that only 11,978 skins were taken during the four working days. July 12. — The guard on Otter Island reports the hauling out of several hundred seals, which he drove off. RECORD KEPT BY H. G. OTIS. July 16. — To-day ends the sealing season; a drive was made from Middle Hill, yielding 2,282 skins, making up the full quota for the island. July 27. — At a conference with the native chiefs complaint was made by them that the smoke and offal from the oil-making plant was driving away the seals. The agent promised to report the complaint to the Treasury Department.3 RECORD KEPT BY J. W. BEAMAN. July 29. — In footing up tbe tally sheets it was found that the quota has been exceeded this year to the extent of 572 skins, and these were withdrawn and charged to quota of 1880. July 31. — The Eeef was visited to-day; the hauling grounds are thickly covered. A pup was taken from the Eeef plateau for dissection and investigation by Dr. White. The rookeries seemed quite destitute of cows, which were probably off in the water. August 1. — The pup taken from the Keef was examined for heart pulsation and respiration; heart pulsation 22 to one- fourth minute; respiration 12 to the minute. August 4. — The young pup from the Eeef was probably not a week old, but was provided with a full set of teeth in upper jaw, viz, 20. The nerve running to the whiskers was found to be very large. August 5. — Tbe Eeef was visited. Seals were quite thickly hauled upon the plateau. The inspirations of pups were counted; result in one case, 10 in one minute; in another, 23 in three minutes; a 4-year-old bull gave 12 in three minutes. There are 10 teeth in the lower jaw of a pup. August 8. — On Eeef seals are hauled out about as usual. The young half bulls seem to be holding pods of two or three cows on the upper grounds away from the water edge. 1 This should be contrasted with Captain Bryant's claim that a sufficient reserve was not being left in 1875 and 1876. 2 These were evidently seals that had died on drives from Zapadni or Tolstoi. 3 What credence was given this absurd complaint is not known. The seals show utter indifference to the smoke of the vessels that ply about the islands. 272 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBTLOF ISLANDS. August 13.— Seals are out in force on Tolstoi rookery. Fewer seals are on the hauling grounds, as the bachelors are now distributed over the rookery. August 10. A pup taken from Speel, upon dissection, showed the foramen ovale and the ductus arterioaus to be open. These ducts near the heart are usually closed up after birth in the animal world. The bulls have left the rookeries within a few days, making not far from three months' shore duty without food or entering the water. August 18. — It is reported that seals have not hauled on Otter Island for two weeks. August 20.— Three seals were examined by Dr. White. In all cases the foramen or ale and the ductus arteriosus were closed. They were found open only in the two mouths' old pup from Speel. Microscopic examination revealed a probable parasite to the flat parasitic worm that infests the intestines of the seal. The long, flat worm is found in the upper part of the bowels. The cylindrical worm, with pointed conical ends, is only in the stomach, so far as observed.1 August 22. — The plateau of the Reef was quite uniformly covered with cows, pups, and bachelors. The females are more silvery gray2 in appearance than formerly. All appear fat and healthy. August 23. — The seals were found hauled out in large numbers over and well back from the rookeries. In a pup which was found dead on the rookery ground at Lukaniu ike foramen ovale was found open and the ductus arteriosus was short, large, and open. This pup was evidently newly born at the time of death, which must have taken place ten days at least before this date. No bladder was found, but a large duct passing from the umbilicus to the urinal vent. August 26. — Found a dead female seal 3 years old cast upon the rocks along Speel. She was given to Dr. White for dissection. August 28. — A drive from Zoltoi for food yielded 203 seals.3 Only 3 skins were accepted; of these 2 were females accidently killed. August 29. — Cows and pups are distributed quite numerously over Lukanin rookery. Many fine 5-year-old males are to be seen in different parts of the rookery. September 5. — The rookeries at Tolstoi, English Bay, and Southwest Bay seemed to be in good condition for this season of the year. September 12. — The old bulls are all gone from Lukanin and Kitovi. A few half bulls still remain. Cows, pups, and bachelors are numerous, but not so many are on shore as at my previous visit. Two female seals were found insensible under the bluff at East Landing, where they had evidently fallen from the top. September 23. — A favorite hauling ground for the pups is the shore line south of the village, though unoccupied by any of the other classes of seals during the season. The north side shore is also frequented by pups as far as the new warehouse. 1 These observations seem to have approached very closely the discovery of the parasite Uncinaria. 2 Due to the presence of 2-year-olds and yearlings, the younger seals coming in later and being lighter in color as a rule. 3 A discussion is noted between the Aleuts and the agent as to the age of the seals to be killed for food, the people preferring the smaller seals. The custom had been to kill the larger ones. The agent at this time, however, apparently granted the request to kill the smaller seals. Complaint was urged against the disturbance of the rookeries in getting the specimens for Dr. White. The skins of the smaller seals were naturally rejected and so wasted, while nothing is said of the disturbance created by driving Reef Rookery three times for food. RECORD OF J. W. BEAMAN. 273 September 25. — The seals are largely diminished in numbers on the plateau of the Eeef. Evidently they live more in the water and haul out less frequently and for shorter periods at this season. September 30. — Pups are still abundant on the south shore of the bluff under the village, and in the water edge along the edge. On Speel are three old bulls which seem to have come back to their old camping ground. Octobers. — The sea-lion drive from Northeast Point arrived at G p. in., having left Northeast Point at noon Sunday, the quickest drive on record. The 195 sea lions killed were all females. ' October 20. — In a drive for food from Lukanin 10 females were killed by accident. The seals still hold the plateau of the Eeef in about the same number as upon the 25th ultimo. October 21. — On Speel the cows and pups are holding both sides of the point. One old bull is hauled up among the cows. The pups are still nursing. October 25. — No seals are hauled south of the village. It is evident that many cows and pups have gone since the cold weather set in. October 26. — Permission was granted to kill 5,000 male pups. Complaint was made that it would be difficult to get 5,000 pups of sufficient size if the females were excluded. Permission to include females was positively refused. October 29. — Upon knocking down a pod of pups driven from Lukanin such a large proportion were found to be females that orders were given to kill each one separately after examination ; 540 were killed. October 30. — In the morning the balance of the drive was killed — 335. Direction was given to the chief to see that the female pups were driven back into the water. Undoubtedly a large number of these will be unable to recover from the effects of the drive and will perish.2 October 31. — From a drive of pups at Kitovi 999 were killed. Care had evidently been used in selecting this lot, as only one or two females were noticed. November 1. — The pups which were killed by accident or exhausted on the drive from Kitovi were brought up in a wagon and distributed — 90 in all; 7 were reported crushed by the larger seals while sorting the sexes. These were too small for food or use. Ten were brought in by the men engaged in the work of selection. A total of 1,106 from Kitovi were killed, making 1,985 pups to date. A number of pup car- casses weighed 8 to 10 pounds each after the viscera, pelt, and blubber had been removed.3 November 3. — At a drive of pups from Lukanin 1,142 were killed; 42 which had been killed in selecting or on the drive were brought in by the men. 1 In this indiscriminate slaughter of the sea lions we probably have the cause of their great dimi- nution. 2 The probable careless methods of handling these pups in preceding seasons here suggested is worthy of note. The agent during this season seems to have given the matter close personal attention, and it is strange, in view of what he found, that the wasteful practice should have been allowed to continue. It is not likely that this agent's course of action endeared him to the natives, but it was certainly directed toward the best interests of the Government. :! As the skins of these pups, if allowed to grow up, would have been worth to the Government in tax alone $3, it becomes evident that the supplying of pup meat to the Aleuts was an expensive luxury. 274 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. November 6. — The pups killed by accident on the drive of yesterday — 79 in all — were brought in and distributed. November 10. — A drive of pups was made from Gorbatch ; 356 were killed, making a total of 5,070. On this drive 4 females were overcome by the exertion or smothered by the piling of the drove. The drives from Gorbatch were composed of mothers and pups, which were drive.i on the level north of Zoltoi sands, and the pups caught and examined. Mothers and female pups were then released and driven into the water. November 13. — In a drive for food made from the Eeef several females were killed by accident; probably eight or ten. November 19. — Only 7 cows and 2 pups were on Speel rookery this morning and these took to the water on seeing a human being. November 25. — The Eeef was visited to-day. The first plateau was found deserted and the second with about 100 seals upon it. The bluifs had quite a number on their sides. November 30. — No pups and very few other seals are reported from Southwest Bay, December 27. — It is reported that GOO seals are at Northeast Point; none at Polovina; a large number on Sea Lion Rock. 1880. January 10.— A visit to Eeef to-day showed about 2,000 seals hauled out at the extreme point. Sea Lion Eock was thickly covered with seals and in the water south of the point there were numerous pods. April 30. — Bull seals are reported on the Eeef, Tolstoi, and Lukanin, the first of the season. May 1. — A visit was made to Gorbatch and 2 bulls were found hauled up and holding their positions. May 3. — The 2 bulls previously noted on Gorbatch were gone. Two others were on the Eeef. These did not seem to be holding definite positions and they took to the water. May 14. — A drive of 406 for food was made at Southwest Bay and 204 seals were killed. The killing is earlier than last year. All along the shore the bulls were holding their positions; quite a pod of bachelors were hauled up at Tolstoi. May 21. — Eighty-six bulls holding positions were counted on Gorbatch. The number on the other side could not be counted. There were probably 300 in all, including both sides. May 24. — An inspection was made on Kitovi and Lukanin rookeries; 112 bulls counted on Kitovi, and 142 on Lukaniu, with a possible error in the count of 25 to50.' May 28. — A single bull seal which hauled out at Speel yesterday, the first of the season, is gone to-day. May 29. — No seals of consequence hauled at Northeast Point yet. 1 In the foregoing record by Mr. Beaman we have an approach to what should have been the wide-awake agent's record. He gave in 1879 a count of the bulls on Polovina and Nah Spil. Here he has made a count of the bulls on Kitovi and Lukanin, which enables us to arrive at some idea of the true status of these breeding grounds. Had such a beginning been followed up and expanded it would have soon thrown the needed light upon the condition of the herd, but Mr. Beaman does not again appear in the record, and it again sinks into geueralties. RECORD FOR 1880. 275 RECORD KEPT BY H. G. OTIS. June 1. — The regular sealing season began to-day, with a drive from the Reef, 216 seals being killed. June 10. — Reports show the rookeries at Northeast Point in favorable condition. The first seal pup of the season was seen on the Reef. Bulls numerous on the rookeries; killable seals scarce. June 16. — Some difficulty is being encountered in obtaining killable seals in satisfactory numbers; 25 or 30 per cent of each drive has to be released, being either too large or too small. June 23. — A visible improvement in the quality and number of killable seals is noticeable, a larger proportion of medium-sized 3-year-olds having appeared on the hauling grounds. The date of their appearance corresponds with last year. June 24. — Large increase of cows is noticeable on the Reef.1 July 2. — A visit to Kitovi, Tolstoi, and Lukaniu showed a marked increase in the number of cows and pups, especially at Tolstoi, where they lay like sardines packed in a box. July 3. — The agent visited Otter Island, as directed, to keep lookout for vessels. A number of seals hauled out on the shore; no females or pups. July 15. — Frequent visits to the Reef and other rookeries find them filled to the utmost limit of their apparent expansion of former years, the rookeries being packed closely with cows, bulls, and pups. Several freshly born pups seen. The rutting season appears to be at its height. July 17. — A drive from Zoltoi yielded 534 skins, making up the island's full quota of 80,000 for the season; of this number 75.000 have been taken since the 1st day of June, an average of 2,167 skins per day for the thirty-five days actually consumed in the work.a August 11. — On recent visits to Reef, Zoltoi, Lukaniu, and Tolstoi countless multitudes of seals of all classes have been found hauling out and spreading over ground not occupied earlier in the season. The shores along the front of all the rookeries are black with seal pups which are just learning to swim. The cows now go freely in and out of the water, released as they are from their more urgent family duties. Their masters pay little attention to their movements compared with the jealous watchfulness shown them during the breeding and rutting periods. August 15. — About 1,000 seals reported hauled out on Otter Island. August 21. — The appearance of Tolstoi and Reef rookeries at this time show them to be occupied by a larger number of seals, apparently, than at any previous period of the season. On the Reef the entire space from shore to shore is thickly covered with seals of all classes and ages. At Tolstoi all the ground held during the height of the season, together with the slope to the top of the bluff, is similarly though more densely covered. The pups, waxing strong, have hauled out far backward from the shore. 1 It can not be determined from this and the following entries what is meant by the increase, whether it is over some date in the same season or over the preceding season. It is evident, however, that we can not infer a diminution as yet in the seal herd. 2 It must be noted here that this result of the season's sealing is wholly incompatible with Captain Byant's claim of a scarcity of bulls in 1875-76. 276 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. September 8. — Seals are present in large numbers everywhere, the pups hauling out for play near the village, indifferent to the presence of human beings. The waters of the cove are alive with them and they literally swarm the shore about the Point Warehouse. September 12. — Seals in undiminished numbers remain at Northeast Point and far down the north shore. October 20. — Seals are hauled out at Tolstoi and the Reef in nearly as great numbers as in August; less numerous at Zoltoi, Kitovi, and Lukanin. The larger proportion by far are cows and pups. The latter class is also to be seen in large numbers in the water. October 31. — The natives urged permission to begin killing pups, claiming 5,000 would be needed. With a view to protect the seal life, the number of pups to be killed was fixed at 4,400, the natives being required to take more bachelors, their skins to go into the quota. It was shown that the natives were supplied during the year ending July 30, 1880, with no less than 11,801 small seals, making an average net weight of 8 pounds for the pup seals and 32 pounds for the larger seals, a total weight (estimated) of 255,928 pounds, or an average of 700 pounds a day for every day of the year, or more than 2£ pounds a day for every native man, woman, and child on the island.1 November G. — A drive of pups was made from the Reef to make up the total of 4,400 for the season. November 22. — The majority of the seals have disappeared ; comparatively few are at the Reef, Kitovi, Lukanin, Tolstoi, and Southwest and English bays. December 31. — Seals have been scarce on land since the late heavy storm; but to-day several hundred appeared upon the Reef, while Sea Lion Rock and the water about it are black with them. A number are reported at Tolstoi and Southwest Bay, but more at Kitovi and Lukanin. 1881. January 3. — Small drive was made from Tolstoi, the last of the season, and 123 killed. A total of 2,308 large young seals and 4,413 pups killed for winter food. February 1. — A few seals are reported in the water at Northeast Point; none on land. April 24. — Three or 4 fur seals were seen near Sea Lion Rock in the water, possibly bachelors which have been about the islands all winter. May 1. — A bull seal was seen at Speel, near the village. May 4. — Five seals, including 1 bull, are in the water off the Reef. May 5. — A dozen bull seals are hauled out at Kitovi, 2 at Northeast Point, and a number seen in the water off Lukanin. May 6. — Two bull seals are hauled up on the Cove Spit (Lagoon). Fourteen bulls are reported at Lukanin. May 10. — Ten bulls are at Kitovi and 20 at Lukanin. 1 This entry puts the matter of waste through the killing of pups aud under-sized seals in its true light; but. as though the agent who had undertaken "to protect the seal life" had survived his usefulness, we hear nothing of him after this year, and nothing further is said about the killing of pups and small seals. RECORD OF. J. H. MOULTON. 277 May 12. — Thirty-eight bulls are counted on the Reef, some of them hauled up as much as 200 yards from the shore. May 13. — About 63 bulls are hauled up at Southwest Bay ami a number are seeu in the water. May 18. — About 130 bulls and 2 bachelors are hauled up on Reef. May 21.— About 175 to 200 bulls are on Reef to day. May 29. — The first food drive of 165 seals was made to-day, fifteen days later than last year. June 6. — The first killing (421 seals) of the regular sealing season was made from Reef and Zoltoi. June 8. — A few cow seals are reported out at Lukanin. June 10. — A small drive was made from Halfway Point, 474 skins. The season is slightly behind last year, apparently attributable to cold weather. Bulls are numerous. June 12. — Two pups were seen to-day at Tolstoi, the first of the season. June 28. — A raid on Otter Island was discovered and nipped short. July 8. — A drive from Halfway Point gave 1,118 skins and 1,151 were taken at Northeast Point. Killing at the latter point was discontinued for the present. July 20. — The last drive of the sealing season was made from Tolstoi, Zoltoi, and Lukanin, 2,530, making a total of 80,000 for St. Paul. RECORD KEPT BY J. H. MOULTON. August 9. — About 1,000 seals are reported on Otter Island. November 17.— An unusual number of seals remain on the islands at this date, probably owing to the mild weather. November 30. — Seals in large numbers still remain on the island. (Apparently no killing of pups this season.) 1882. January 24. — Four thousand to 6,000 seals are still to be seen on Sea Lion Rock and a few still remain at Northeast Point. February 8. — A food drive was made from the Reef and 103 seals killed.1 April 26. — One bull seal was seen in the water off Lukanin. April 28. — One bull seal has hauled out at Kitovi; one is in the water off south end of Reef. May 2. — Two bull seals are reported on Southwest Bay. May 8. — Five bulls are on Tolstoi. May 16. — A few young seals are on Sea Lion Rock. June 2. — The first drive for the quota is made from Southwest Bay, Middle Hill, and Tolstoi; 400 killed. The quota for this year is 78,000 from St. Paul; 22,000 from St. George. June 13. — A drive from Halfway Point yielded 217 skins; 366 were taken at Northeast Point. A few females and pups are present on the rookeries. An unusual number of " killers" are about the rookeries this mouth. July 20.— A killing from Southwest Bay yielded 729, filling the quota of 1882. 1 Again the seals seem to have remained a limit, the islands all winter. 278 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. RECORD KEPT BY H. A. GLIDDEN. September 25. — The rookeries at Tolstoi. English Bay, and Northwest Bay are all occupied by cows and pups hauled out upon laud, in many places quite a distance from the shore. October 14. — The seals have left the breeding rookery (Lagoon) opposite the Warehouse. Most of the seals have disappeared from Tolstoi ; none are left at English Bay. December 31. — No seals are visible except on Sea Lion Hock. 1883. April 30. — The ice is still firm about the island. May 6. — The chiefs report the appearance of seals on the Reef and Lukaniu. May 8. — Seals reported on Tolstoi. Some ice still remains. May 1C. — Several bull seals are on the Reef. June 4. — The first regular drive of the season gave 592 seals from Southwest Bay and Tolstoi. June 10. — But very few small seals have arrived as yet upon the island, a considerably smaller number than at this time last year. July 10. — Owing to the small number of large seals, the work at Northeast Point was suspended and the sealers returned to the village. July 13. — A drive from Southwest Bay yielded 2,444 seals. Seals are arriving late at St. George; only 7,500 secured there to date.1 August 2. — There are 400 skins yet to be taken to fill the quota of 15,000 for St. George. October 26. — Seals are leaving the island very fast; the rookeries and hauling grounds show that more than half have left; at Northeast Point but few remain. November 2. — The quota of pups for food, 3,000 in all, was completed to-day. November 18. — But few seals remain on the rookeries; more are on the Reef than anywhere else. November 24. — About 2,000 large young seals have hauled up on Southwest Bay within the last two or three days. December 4. — Trapping of foxes has been suspended, because the setting of traps near the rookeries tends to frighten the seals into the water. December 5. — Seals have left Tolstoi, English Bay, and Halfway Point. A few are still at Southwest Bay, mostly cows and pups. A few small seals are on the Reef, but so near the water that it is impossible to drive them for food. December 12. — A food killing from the Reef gave 420 seals. Seals are hauling out again at Southwest Bay and Northeast Point. December 2G. — Natives report many seals hauled out at Northeast Point. Great numbers are seen daily in the water on the east side. A few hundred are on the south end of the Reef and many on Sea Lion Rock. 1 In this and other entries during this season we see evidence of a growing scarcity of seals on the hauling grounds. This is in part doubtless due to the growing pelagic catch, but must in part also be due to peculiar seasonal conditions. RECORD OF G. R. TINGLE. 279 188-4. January 11. — A few hundred seals are on Sea Lion Rock. January 12. — A few large seals are hauled out on the beach at the end of the island. January 20. — The seals have left Northeast Point and Sea Lion Rock. March 6. — Orders were given to shoot or house all hogs which had become a nuisance and had been visiting Zoltoi, Reef, and Nah Speel, driving the seals into the water. April 26. — The first fur seal of the season was seen to-day. April 30. — The large seals have hauled out at Southwest Bay; two at Tolstoi, and many in the water about English Bay. May 2. — The large male seals are beginning to haul out on the rookeries. Several are already on the extreme south end of the Reef rookery, and quite a large number in the water. May 3. — Two bulls are on Lukanin. May 11. — Bulls are reported by the natives on all the rookeries. The first on Warehouse Point came last night. A few bachelor seals are hauled out at Southwest Bay and a few are in the water near the point of the Reef. May 15. — "Killers" are quite numerous. May 21. — Drives for food were made from Halfway Point and Reef; 187 killed. "Killers" drove a shark (?) on shore at Halfway Point. June 3. — A drive was made from the Reef and 318 killed. July 21.— A drive from Middle Hall, Kitovi, Zoltoi, yielded 1,911. This killing closed the season. The total number killed was 88,995, of which 85,000 were accepted by the company.1 July 29. — Eight hundred seal skins are yet to be taken on St. George to complete the quota of 15,000 for that island. August 26. — The number of large seals in the food drive to-day was unusually small. In a drove of 2,000 only 57 were killed, the skins of which were accepted. The state of affairs is very different from previous years and difficult to account for.2 November 5. — Since the 3d, 2,731 pups have been killed for winter food. December 31. — The weather is unusually mild. The seals have nearly all gone. Those remaining are at Southwest Bay, Reef, and Sea Lion Rock. 1885. April 27^ — The first seal seen this season is hauled out at Southwest Bay. RECORD KEPT BY G. R. TINGLE. June 3. — A drive (place not stated) was made and 49 seals killed. June 19. — A drive from Lukanin and Halfway Point yielded 1,307 skins. The natives found an albino pup; it was dead, having been bitten in the head. 1 The securing of this quota shows that a more normal condition of the hauling grounds existed in this season. One can not help noting in passing the rejection here implied of nearly 4,000 skins in skins in a quota of 85,000; or at $3 a skin, a loss of $12,000. 2 Here we begin to see the actual scarcity of bachelor seals resulting from the diminished birth rate of 1880 and 1881, when the pelagic catch exceeded 15,000 as against a normal catch of 5,000 in the ten years previous. 280 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PKIBILOF ISLANDS. July 18. — In the drive from the Eeef was an old bull with his ear cut off. The natives testified to the fact that the right ear of a number of male pups on the Reef had been cut off in 1871. The left ear was similarly cut off of a number of male pups on Lukanin rookery. The presence of this 14-year-old bull shows the fact that seals return to the rookery where they were born and live to be at least 14 years of age. July 27.1— A drive from Zoltoi Eeef and Middle Hill yielded 983 skins, and closed the season. November 2. — The natives killed pups from the Eeef, separating them on the ground and killing only males. November 7. — The remainder of the quota of pup seals were killed, making in all for the season 2,788. November 30. — Examination of the rookeries during the past week shows no seals at Kitovi, Lukaniu, Zoltoi, Village Eeef (Lagoon), and Halfway Point; very few were on Eeef, Tolstoi, English Bay, Middle Hill, Southwest Bay, and Northeast Point. Probably less than a thousand seals, all told, are on the islands. December 17. — The natives make food drive from Keef, killing 708 seals. December 31. — There is not a single seal left on the island. Their departure may have dated from Christmas night, as abtput 20 were seen on the Eeef at that time, but were not there the next day. 1886. January 8. — One bull seal is hauled out to day on the Eeef, and about 50 in the water. January 19. — Fully 2,000 seals are in the water between Sea Lion Eock and the Eeef. Some seals were hauled out on the point of rocks. January 21. — The natives made a killing of seals on Sea Lion Eock for food, getting 83. The weather for some time has been mild, this probably inducing them to haul out. No seals are on any of the rookeries. January 29. — The natives killed seals for food at Southwest Bay.2 April 16. — A killable seal, the first this season, was seen in the water at Northeast Point. May 2. — Two bulls were seen trying to land on Sea Lion Eock; 6 killable seals were in the water; 2 bulls were on Garbotch, and one was in the water trying to make a landing. One bull reported from Halfway Point in the water; 2 were hauled out at Northeast Point on April 28, and 2 in the water. Seals were seen in the water at Tolstoi and 2 had landed. May 5. — A drive of 20 killable seals was made to-day, of which only 7 were killed. This is the earliest drive in years. May 6. — I measured the Zapadni rookeries, on which at least a dozen bulls had already taken position. A dozen more bulls were found on Northeast Point yesterday. ' 1 The retardation of the date at which the quota was filled is worthy of note as showing the growing scarcity of seals under the diminishing birth rate due to pelagic sealing. '* The frequent departures and returns of seals for this season as here recorded are interesting. 3 As a result of the measurement here referred to, Mr. Tingle found the breeding territory doubled and the breeding population greatly increased over the conditions of 1872-1874. The absurdity of this appears presently when the decline of the herd already under way at this time becomes so plainly evident in 1889. RECORD OP A. P. LAUD. 281 May 8. — Nah Speel has long since1 been abandoned by the seals. May 9. — Three bull seals have hauled up on the Lagoon rookery. May 17. — A food drive was made from Southwest Bay and 74 killed. May 19. — Seals are reported hauling fast at Northeast Point. Old bulls are located in considerable numbers as far as the top of Hutchinson Hill. "Killers" swarm around the point driving seals and sea lions on shore. May 24. — A few cows were seen about a bull on Gorbatch, the first family of the season.2 June 4. — Made the first drive of the season from the Reef, killing 561. July 26. — The company finished the killing of the season to-day, getting the full quota of 85,000 skins.3 A sealing schooner was captured with 574 skins on board. RECORD KEPT BY A. P. LAUD. August 3. — Five sealing schooners are reported in the neighborhood of the islands. October 1. — At Northeast Point the rookeries are filled with seals. 1887. January 1. — An examination of the rookeries shows them in good condition, with quite a number of small seals present. January 5. — The weather is very mild; a large number of seals are about the island and on the different rookeries. January 11. — An examination of the rookeries shows that all of the seals have left. February 28. — The weather still continues mild ; four fur seals are seen on North (probably Northeast Point) rookery. May 1. — One bull is reported on Eeef; one at Southwest Bay. May 3. — Two bulls are reported at Tolstoi ; three at Southwest Bay. May 14. — There are 23 bulls on the Reef; 14 at Southwest Bay; 8 at Tolstoi; 7 at Lukaniu ; 2 on Lagoon Reef; 24 at Northeast Point. May 21. — Fifty killable seals are reported at Northeast Point. May 24. — A drive for food was made from Reef and Southwest Bay, 275 being killed. June 6. — The first drive for the quota was made from Tolstoi, 419 being killed. June 19. — A number of cows have landed and some pups are born. July 24. — Falling short on drives of yesterday, made small drive from Tolstoi, getting the needful 232 skins to make up the quota of 100,000.4 RECORD KEPT BY J. P. MANCHESTER. August 16. — A drive of seals was made for food at Zoltoi, Reef, and Lukanin. Only 207 were obtained out of a very large number. 1 This is a mistake. See note under date of May 11, 1884. The abandonment occurred this very year. 2 This was probably a group of bachelors with a bull among them. 3 The retardation of the quota continues; prior to 1883 the quota was filled by, if not before, July 20. 4 The filling of the quota was assisted in this year by the reduction of the age and size of the killable seals to be taken, thus anticipating the quota of the year following. 282 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. The cutter Rush reports having captured four schooners — the Bering Sea, with 151 skius; Ann Beck, 336 skins; W. P. Sawyer, 479; Dolphin, GOO skins. Schooners have been shooting seals for days off Northeast Point. Watchmen have fired into boats five times to keep them off the rookeries. A schooner was seized off Otter Island with 161 skins. August 20. — The Rush reports the capture of another schooner with 800 skins. October 29. — Men sent to Northeast Point to examine rookeries report very few seals. October 31. — A distribution of 2,178 seal pups for food for the natives was made. November 20. — Men were sent to Reef, Middle Hill, and Tolstoi to see if seals for a food drive could be found, but the storm of last night had driven them into the water. November 26. — A drive for food was made from Middle Hill and Tolstoi. Very few fit to kill were found, many cows and small seals being mingled with them. December 5. — Men were sent to Sea Lion Eock to kill seals for food- 1888. January 11. — No seals are in sight on the island except at Sea Lion Eock. January 20. — The natives report 700 seals at Northeast Point. They were ordered to drive them to the village, being careful and going slow if it took a week, killing all that gave out on the way. January 24. — The first drive from Northeast Point reached the village at 2 p. m. in good condition, the time from Northeast Point being eighty-two hours. January 25. — The second drive from Northeast Point came in at 8 a. m. in good condition, 100 hours on the way. Five hundred seals killed and the meat salted. January 26. — Boats were sent for seal meat left on Sea Lion Eock. The living seals have left the rock. May 5. — Two bulls are reported on the north side of the Eeef; 3 on Tolstoi. May 7. — Eleven bulls are reported at Southwest Bay; 4 on the Eeef; 1 on Lukanin. May 9. — The Eeef has 8 bulls and 1 was seen lauding. May 10. — Four bulls are out on the Village Eeef (Lagoon). May 11. — Twenty-five killable seals are reported from Northeast Point. The Eeef has 15 bulls; Lukauin, 4. May 26. — Watchmen report 1 pup born at Northeast Point on May 21. The seals and bulls are hauling very fast on all the rookeries for this time of the year. May 28. — A drive for food was made from Eeef. "Killers" are in sight around the island close in to shore. RECORD KEPT BY G. R. TINGLE. June 6. — The first regular drive of the season was made from Eeef, 121 skins being secured. June 21. — The rookeries are still very sparsely populated and killable seals are hauling slowly. July 27. — The season's sealing closed to-day, completing the full quota of 100,000 skins; 85,000 from St. Paul; 15,000 from St. George.1 1 The quota was this year, as last, composed of an increasing number of undersized seals, thus anticipating the quota of 1889. RECORD FOR 1889. 283 RECORD KEPT BY J. P. MANCHESTER. October 30. — The heavy gale has done damage in killing pups on different parts of the islands 5 the damage to seal life by such storms as this must be great.1 November 9. — Driving of pups for winter food, begun on the 5th, was completed to-day.2 November 24. — A drive of seals. could not be made to-day, all being in the water on account of the snow and wind. November 26. — A drive from Reef was secured and 104 killed. The bachelors are very scarce now on this side of the island, and when you find them they are mixed up with the cows. December 11.- -Three unsuccessful attempts to get a drive have been made since the 1st instant. The seals have all gone from this end of the island, with the exception of a few at Tolstoi, and they can not be reached. A good many seals are reported still at Northeast Point. December 13. — After many efforts, a drive of seals was made from Tolstoi and 206 were killed. Seals are very scarce, except at Northeast Point. The bad weather of the fall probably accounts for it. December 26. — The boats went to Sea Lion Rock, securing 78 seals. 1889. May 3. — One bull seal is reported on Sea Lion Rock. May 4. — The chief reports 1 bull seal this afternoon on Reef. The ice about the island makes it hard for the bulls to land. May 7. — Three bull seals are on the Reef; 1 on Kitovi. May 10. — Eight bulls are on the Reef; I on Zoltoi; 20 on Northeast Point, and 21 at Southwest Bay, English Bay, Tolstoi, Lukanin and Kitovi; total to date, 50. The bulls are hauling faster than last year, but the spring is very late. The island is still surrounded with ice and plenty of deep snow lies on the beaches. May 11. — Three bulls are on the village reef (Lagoon); 9 on Tolstoi. May 22. — Natives kill 124 seals on Sea Lion Rock. May 31. — "Killers" are numerous about the island. June 4. — A visit to Tolstoi showed 2 cows and about 200 or 300 killable seals. June 7. — Only about 60 seals are on the reef; about 200 on Southwest Bay; very few at English Bay and Tolstoi. June 10. — Made a drive from reef; obtained 120 only. A good many cows with pups are reported on the rookery. June 26. — The killing of 4,200 seals to date is reported from St. George; killed 1,314 seals to-day from English Bay and Middle Hill. At Northeast Point 441 were taken. June 27. — Killed seals at Southwest Bay, 311; and at Northeast Point, 844. About 2,000 killable seals were found on Otter Island. 1 This statement is too vague to be of value, but it is probable that here as later the phenomenon of dead pups on the sands of English Bay, Zoltoi, and elsewhere, after a heavy gale, is alluded to. The investigations of 1896 and 1897 show that these were wormy pups washed from the rookery fronts and deposited on the sand beaches. Few pups are killed by the surf. 2 In view of the continued decrease of the young male life on the hauling grounds this premature killing of its product seems wholly inexcusable. 15184, PT 2 3 284 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. June 29. — A drive from English Bay and Tolstoi yielded 1,038 skins. The quota is 5,000 skins short of the conditions of last year at this time. July 2. — A drive at Halfway Point yielded 834 skins. At Northeast Point 968 skins were taken. Seals are coming in slowly this year and seem to have diminished. July 6. — A drive from English Bay and Tolstoi yielded 1,302. At Northeast Point 376 were taken. The quota is now 7,000 short as compared with last year, the shortage being chiefly at Northeast Point. St. George is reported to be 1,300 skins short as compared with last year. July 10. — A drive from Halfway Point yielded 654, and one from Northeast Point, 800 skins. The quota is 7,370 short as compared with last year. July 13. — At Southwest Bay 1,006 skins were taken; at Northeast Point, 793. There is an evident decrease also in the breeding rookeries.1 July 25. — Two schooners, having 418 and 76 skins, respectively, were captured. A drive from English Bay and Middle Hill yielded 1,752 skins. July 31. — At Northeast Point 538 skins were taken to-day, making the total of 85,000 for the season.2 August 9. — St. George furnished only 14,978 skins. RECORD KEPT BY CHAS. J. GOPF. September 1. — The old bulls have about all gone from the Reef. The pups are getting rather large and can be seen by the thousands playing in the water, but they are not nearly so numerous as in the past. RECORD KEPT BY G. R. NETTLETON. October 6. — Captain Healy, of the Bear, reports that in several days' cruise about the islands he had not seen a dozen seals in the water within 10 miles of shore. All the bull seals which held places on the breeding grounds have gone. The rookeries are well covered with cows and pups, mixed with bachelors. The water adjacent is full of seals as far out as 2 miles. November 7. — At a drive of pups for food 1,044 were killed and distributed. November 18. — The killable seals are in the water or near its edge and mixed with cows. November 23. — A raid was made on Zapadni; 7 dead cows were found and 1 wounded bull. A drive from Reef was made, yielding 347 seals for food. December 2. — There are few seals on the Reef. They have all left Lukanin and Kitovi. A number remain at Zapadni and large numbers are reported at Northeast Point. 1 Here we have the first intimation that there is any diminution in the breeding Heals. 2 This quota, as we know, for 1889 was made up almost wholly of undersized seals, which would not under normal conditions have been taken at all. This course of action was pursued because the lease under which the islands was then held was drawing to a close. The conditions were well enough understood by the lessees, if not by the officers of the Government, :\s the following statement by Superintendent Mclntyre ("Seal Life," Senate Doc. 137, Part I, 1895) will show: "I repeatedly pointed out to our company and to the special Treasury agents during the seasons of 1887, 1888, and 1889 that the seals were rapidly diminishing, and that in order to get the full quota allowed by law we were obliged to kill, in increasing numbers in each of those years, animals that should have been allowed to attain greater size, and finally the catch of 1889 was mostly of this class." This admission makes clear the conditions of these years and fully explains the gradual progress of the decline notwithstanding the abrupt collapse of the bachelor herd. RECORD OF G. R. NETTLETON. 285 December 4. — No seals remain on Lagoon. December 11. — A food drive was made from Zapadni. It was two days in reaching the village. Six seals perished on the way. The drive yielded 240 skins. 1890. January 22. — Pour hundred seals are reported hauled up under Hiitchinson Hill. Natives were sent to secure them. January 26. — Two hundred and one seals were killed at Northeast Point. January 27. — Natives sent in boats to Sea Lion Eock, succeeded in killing 180 seals. April 28. — The first bull of the year hauled out at Tolstoi Eookery to-day. April 29. — Three bulls hauled out at Zapadui. April 30. — One bull is on Sea Lion Kock. May 6. — Ten bulls are on Zapadni and 6 on Eeef Point. May 7. — Three bulls hauled out on Lagoon. May 9. — Eighteen bulls are on Zapadni. May 10. — One hundred bulls are reported at Northeast Point; a large number in the water. May 12. — Six bulls are hauled out at Halfway Point. May 14. — Fifty bachelor seals are reported hauled out on Sea Lion Eock. May 21. — The first killing for food was made on Sea Lion Eock, 131 seals. June 15. — Mr. Goff made an examination of the Eeef, comparing its conditions with those of the same date last year. He found more bulls and a better class, i. e., uniformly larger and covering more ground. The bachelors on the extreme point are not as numerous as a year ago. June 6. — The north end and middle part of Lukauin show fully as many seals in sight as last year; while the western end does not make so good a showing. June 10. — The first cow arrived on the Eeef on the 5th. The first pup was born to-day. June 11. — The first drive for the quota was made from the Eeef, yielding 574 skins. June 18. — A drive from Middle Hill and Tolstoi yielded 274 skins. Nineteen half-grown bulls were turned away. As many yearlings as seals killed, and half as many 2-year-olds, were allowed to return to the water. These figures constitute a fair average for the work of the season thus far; the bulls actually counted; the others are a close estimate. June 23. — At a drive from Middle Hill and Tolstoi 521 were killed. Seventy-five per cent of the seals driven to the village were turned back into the. sea, 10 per cent being 2-year-olds and the balance yearlings. June 24. — Of the drive from Eeef and Zoltoi 426 seals were killed. About 65 per cent of the drive was turned back into the sea, about all being yearlings. June 26. — From the drive at Southwest Bay 117 were killed; 65 per cent were rejected. Of those turned away half were yearlings, one-fourth 2-year-olds, and the rest old bulls. June 28. — A drive of 1,417 seals was made from Eeef — 206 were killed; 1,211 were turned back. At Northeast Point 79 seals were killed out of a drive of 2,000. June 30. — A drive from English Bay, Middle Hill, and Tolstoi yielded 209 skins; 83 per cent of the drive was rejected. 286 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. July 1. — At a drive from Keel' 246 were killed and 95 per cent turned back. july 2. — At a drive from Halfway Point 242 seals were killed and 95 per cent turned back. July 4. — At the drive from Tolstoi 481 were killed and 90J per cent turned back. To day the lessees lowered the standard of weight of skins taken to 5i clean.1 July 5. — A visit to Otter Island showed not more than 50 seals hauled out, and not more than a dozen seals were seen in the water between here and the island. July 17. — Of the 1,514 seals driven from Polovina, 87 per cent were rejected; of 1,320 from Lukanin and Kitovi 85| per cent were rejected. July 18. — At the drive to day from Zapadni 241 seals were killed out of a drive of 1,192. The lessees began taking "wigs" this morning, 82 being taken. July 19.— Out of a drive of 4,620 from the Reef and Zoltoi, 556 were killed. July 20.2— The drive from English Bay, Middle Hill, Tolstoi, Lukanin, Kitovi, and Rocky Point furnished 780 skins; 3,956 were rejected. August 1. — Mr. Goff visited Kitovi, Lukanin, English Bay, Middle Hill, and Tolstoi to-day and estimated that 5,000 seals could be driven from these rookeries and that 10 per cent of them would be killable. RECORD KEPT BY JOSEPH MURRAY. August 14. — A drive for food was made from Lukanin and 124 killed; 6 were smothered in the drive. September 7. — A schooner has been shooting seals off Northeast Point, within a mile of shore, for several days; 100 shots were counted in some cases for one seal taken. November 12. — Pups from Reef rookery were killed, 324 in all, making a total of 2,364, or 12 each for the 197 natives on the islands.3 December 4. — A food drive from Reef yielded 258 skins, of which 235 were prime. 1891. April 24. — A native reports a bull seal landed at Northeast Point. April 29. — No seals are hauled out on the Reef, but seals are in the water about Sea Lion Rock. April 30. — The first bulls are hauled out on the Reef to-day and on Sea Lion Rock. May 2. — Bulls are hauling out to-day on all the rookeries. May 15. — At a food drive from Reef 233 were killed. June 4. — A drive from Reef was made for the lessees and 476 killed; 13 small seals died on the drive. 1 Heretofore an attempt was made to get a better grade of skins than were taken in 1889, but such seals being wanting it was necessary to take smaller ones. The weight of skins here authorized would include 2-year-olds. 3 This closed the season by order of the Treasury agent under protest from the lessees. In view of the percentage of rejected seals in the drive even after lowering the weight to the unprecedented figure of 5£ pounds, and then authorizing the taking of "wigs," this course would seem to have been fully justified. The seals were simply not to be had. This view is borne out by the small showing of the hauling ground visited on August 1 after two weeks' rest. The quota of 1890 had been anticipated in filling that for 1889. 3 In view of the depleted condition shown the bachelor herd of this year, it is incomprehensible that this wasteful practice of slaughtering pups to furnish an article of luxury for the natives should have been allowed. We are glad to note that this is the end of the matter, but that it should hjave continued so long is hard to contemplate with patience. RECORD OF MILTON BARNES. 287 June 11. — Seals were driven from the Reef and 718 killed ; 1,112 seals were killed at Northeast Point. The first cows of the season were reported to-day. June 12. — At the killing to-day at Zapadni 418 seals were taken ; 50 per cent of seals driven were turned back. June 13. — A drive was made from Tolstoi and 232 killed ; 430 were killed at Northeast Point; 50 per cent of those driven were turned back. The killing this year has been limited under the modus vivendi to 7,500 — 6,000 from St. Paul and 1.500 from St. George. June 14. — Tbe first pups were reported to-day. June 16. — A drive was made from the Eeef and 649 killed; about 65 per cent were turned back. Fifty per cent of these could have been taken, furnishing skins of 6 pounds and over, except for the order of the Government limiting the catch to 7,500. June 20. — Killed seals from Tolstoi, 116, to complete quota of 7,500. June 27. — The natives were informed that they would be allowed to kill seals for food until the stagy season, but that none would be killed while stagy. July 12. — During the past five or six days the rookeries have been carefully scanned, and it is believed that at this date they are at their very best for this year. To all appearances the pups are fully 95 per cent of the cows. RECORD KEPT BY MILTON BARNES. September 1. — Mr. J. Stanley-Brown reports a very large number of young pups lying dead upon the rookery at Northeast Point, which, from their emaciated condition, have evidently died of starvation. Others still alive but in a starving condition.1 September 21. — Five " killers" are reported oif East Landing. November 23. — A small drive was made from the Reef but was found to be largely of cows and let go. A drive was made from English Bay and 133 killed. December 2. — The seals are rapidly disappearing. December 3. — Natives returning from Zapadni report no seals there. December 5. — Watchmen were recalled from Northeast Point. Only a few seals are reported there and those in an inaccessible place. No seals are at Halfway Point. 1892. April 27. — The chiefs report 2 bulls hauled up at Southwest Bay, the first arrivals of the season. Seals have been seen in the water some distance from the shore off Reef rookery, but none have hauled up there yet. This is three days earlier than the first arrivals of last year. April 30. — One bull seal is reported on Reef rookery this morning. May"6. — A native returning from Northeast Point reports 18 bulls hauled out there and 10 killable seals. May 10. — Northeast Point watchman reports 40 to 50 bulls hauled out; 10 or 12 killable seals. 1 This is the first record of starved pups which we have, though they must have been starving by the thousands ever since 1886. This fact, together with the failure to recognize the deaths due to the parasitic worm Uncinaria, show how little real inspection of the rookeries was done in all these years. 288 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. RECORD KEPT BY JOSEPH MURRAY. July 6. — One bull, 1 cow, 1 pup, and 3 or 4 bachelors are reported at Southwest Point. July 8. — A food drive was made from Middle Hill. The natives complained through their chief that the meat of the older bulls was not relished by the people. August 5. — Captain Hooper, returning from cruise of Gorwln with Jacob Kotchuten as hunter, reports seals more numerous at 200 miles out than at any other point visited in Bering Sea. Seals killed by his hunter were mothers in milk. RECORD KEPT BY LIEUTENANT AINS WORTH. September 1. — Thousands of seals — bulls, cows, pups — are on Eeef rookery. Numerous dead pups were seen. November 12. — One hundred and forty-eight seals from Middle Hill and Tolstoi were killed for food. One pup was smothered on the killing ground. Three seals died on drive. December 10. — A visit to Halfway Point rookery showed that all the seals had left. 1893. April 17. — Three men left for Northeast Point to clear off the rookeries. April 19. — A few seals were seen swimming in the water near Eeef rookery and some were hauled out on Sea Lion Eock. April 27. — A native reported seeing a bull hauled up at Zapadni rookery. April 28. — There are no seals on the Eeef rookeries. They were probably driven away by the Arctic ice. April 30. — There are no seals at Tolstoi and Middle Hill. One old bull is hauled out at Lagoon rookery. May 1. — There are no seals at Lukanin, Kitovi, and Eeef. One old bull hauled up at Gorbatch. May 5. — One old bull is seen at Kitovi, 2 at Lukanin. The chief reports, on returning from Northeast Point, 9 old bulls hauled out at Halfway Point. May 13. — Two old bulls are hauled up at Tolstoi. Native watchmen returning from Northeast Point report 57 old bulls, 27 sea lions, and 50 bachelors hauled out there. May 15. — Ten old bulls are at English Bay, 17 at Zapadni, and 25 bachelors hauled out. None on Middle Hill. May 17. — Twenty- seven old bulls and 20 bachelors are hauled up on the Lukanin ; 29 old bulls at Kitovi. RECORD KEPT BY JOSEPH MURRAY. June 15. — Seals are slowly coming on the rookeries. June 16. — Seals were driven from Tolstoi for food and 471 killed. RECORD KEPT BY THOS. E. ADAMS. June 26. — From Zoltoi 2,000 seals were driven and 736 skins taken. July 4. — A schooner was reported off Northeast Point with boats down and shooting seals.1 1 This is one of the years of the modus vivendi, when Bering Sea was supposed to be closed. RECORD OF THOMAS E. ADAMS. 289 July 6. — A drive was made from the Reef and 489 killed. A schooner is hovering about Southwest Bay and Northeast Point. August 7. — Seals were driven from Zoltoi and 43 killed. (A protest is made by the agent of the company to the Treasury agent in charge of the islands against the practice of Lieutenant Ainsworth, while acting agent, of visiting the rookeries. The injurious effect of this upon the seals is urged.) November 9. — The weather is blustery and cold. No seals are out and the snow and wind have driven them into the water. November 26. — The seals are leaving Polovina rapidly. November 27. — One hundred and eighty-eight seals were killed from Tolstoi and Reef. After the killing 8 dead pups were found on the road. Their death was due to the darkness and the impossibility of the drivers distinguishing the seals. December 8. — No seals are inland at Lukanin, Kitovi, and Reef rookeries. Some are in the water. None anywhere about Lagoon. December 15. — The seals have left Northeast Point rookeries. A few are in the water. 1894r. April 26. — Three fur seals are reported in the water at the Reef. It is impossible for them to haul up on account of the ice. If there is no better prospect next week an effort will be made to cut a way for them. May 1. — The native chief reports 10 seals in the water and 1 bull hauled out on Reef rookery. May 4. — No seals are hauled up on Reef, Lukanin, and Kitovi. A few seals are in the water. May 6. — One bull hauled up on Lagoon rookery. May 7. — Heavy ice comes from the north. In the evening men returning from Northeast Point report 9 bulls hauled out and 10 on ice, also 1 bull at Lukanin. May 9. — A drive and killing was made on Sea Lion Rock, securing 87 seals. May 11. — A native returning from Halfway Point reports 1 bull hauled out there, another is hauled out at Lukanin, and 3 on the Reef. May 13. — Seals are hauling out slowly; they come in on the ice; 9 bulls are on Reef, 5 on Kitovi, 3 on Lukanin, 5 on Zapadni, and 1 on Tolstoi. May 20. — Owing to the ice, it will be necessary at Northeast Point to cut a way for the seals, the ice being too high and too steep for them to climb. Five men are sent to Northeast Point to cut the roads. May 24. — One native returns from Northeast Point. He reports 13 roads cut for the seals. Two men remain as watchmen. Five hundred seals haul out as soon as the roads are cut. Four are killed by the men for food. June 19. — A drive made from Tolstoi resulted in the killing of 541 seals. The killing was made at Ice House Lake to shorten the drive. A few cows have arrived at Tolstoi. June 23. — Cows are arriving in fair numbers on the rookeries at Zapadni; a drive was made from there one-fourth of a mile long; 850 seals killed. 290 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. RECORD KEPT BY JAMES JUDGE. July 24. — Drives were made yesterday and to-day at Northeast Point, resulting in killing of 1,395 seals. Five seals were smothered in the drive because so small that they could not protect themselves. The skins were tanned with a view to determining whether skins taken thus within a short time after seals had died in this way would be good. (There seems to be no record of the results of this experiment.) August 28. — A live but blind albino pup was caught by natives at Northeast Point and brought to the village. August 29. — Instructions were given the remaining agent not to kill for food before October 10, and to discontinue then till the end of the month if many of the skrns were still stagy. September 9. — A visit to Gorbatch was made and 100 dead pups discovered. September 12. — A count was made of the dead pups on the Lagoon, part of Tolstoi and Lower Zapadni rookeries, resulting in the finding of several hundred pups. The count was not thorough, because such a count at this season of the year would work great damage to the rookeries.1 October 3. — The agent in company with two natives counted dead seal pups on the east side of Reef, finding 1,901 ; 7 dead cows and bulls were also found. October C. — Eight hundred and forty-nine dead pups and 3 dead cows were counted on Lukanin ; 377 pups, 1 bull, and 1 cow on Kitovi. October 11. — Northeast Point rookeries were counted for dead pups and 2,847 found. Owing to the heavy surf of the past few weeks, rookeries have been well washed and many of the dead pups carried to sea. At Halfway Point were counted 784. October 23. — Dead pups were counted on Zapadni, between sand beach and Gov- ernment watchhouse, and found to number, 2,143. December 1. — Most of the rookeries are deserted by the seals. Those still remain- ing are very shy, taking to water easily. December 2. — A few seals are on Tolstoi and Lukanin, none on Middle Hill. But few seals on Gorbatch and Eeef. A number are on Sea Lion Eock, but they can not be reached. December 11. — A few seals are in English Bay, but none on Zapadni, Tolstoi, or Middle Hill. None are on laud on the Eeef; a few in water. December 12. — Natives returning from Northeast Point report a few seals in water but none on land there or at Halfway Point or Lukanin. December 18. — Lukaniu and Kitovi rookeries were visited, but they failed to show seals, either on land or in the adjacent water. 1895. May 2. — Not a single seal has yet been seen on the island by anyone. The earliest arrivals are doubtless kept off by the barrier of ice which surrounds the island. May 5. — The first seal, a bull, is reported hauled out on Zoltoi sands. He can not leave on account of ice. May 9. — The bull from Zoltoi crossed over to Gorbatch Bay during the day and then over to east side of Eeef, where he was in the evening. 'This is nonsense, but shows plainly why the condition of the rookeries was so little known. RECORD OF THOMAS E. ADAMS. 291 May 10. — The lone bull seal departs. May 14. — Natives returning from Southwest Bay report 20 seals in water near Zapadni ; none at English Bay or Tolstoi. Two bulls hauled up last night on the Reef and 4 more this morning. Ice at Southwest Bay makes it impossible for bulls to haul out except at high tide. May 16. — Natives were sent to Northeast Point and report about 20 killable seals* in water and 6 bulls, 2 hauled up. The ice is in such a condition as to make it seem necessary to cut roads for them to haul. A force is sent to Southwest Bay; they cut 7 roads there. Similar work is done on the Reef and Gorbatch. Eight bulls are reported at Zapadni and about 50 bulls and bachelors in water. May 17. — One bull on Kitovi and 2 on Lukanin are reported to-day. May 19. — Two bulls hauled on Lagoon rookery during the day. May 26. — "Killers" are seen on east side. May 27. — Passes are cut in the ice at Northeast Point; 75 to JOO seals are estimated at the Point. Reports from Southwest Bay give 60 bulls at Zapadni; 8 bulls and 3 killable seals are at Tolstoi. Forty killable seals are reported from the Reef. May 28. — A drive for food is made from the Reef and 79 killed. June 13. — A drive was made from Tolstoi; 184 seals killed. June 16. — Five cow seals reported at Northeast Point; 1 at Halfway Point; none at Lukanin. June 18. — Not a solitary cow to be seen on the Reef. June 20.— At Northeast Point 1,961 are killed. September 2. — Judge Crowley visited Tolstoi, reporting an enormous number of dead pups. September 5. — Hundreds of dead pups are reported on Reef. RECORD KEPT BY THOS. E. ADAMS. September 23. — The dead pups were counted on Lukanin and Kitovi, finding 854 pups and 7 cows on Kitovi; 1,347 pups and 8 cows on Lukanin. September 24. — Scarcely any pups are to be found dead on the lower portion of rookeries, as they have been swept away by the surf. September 29. — Dead pups were counted on the Lagoon. But I pup found adjacent to water's edge on account of surf. Total count — 300 pups, 2 cows, 1 bull ; 40 starving and dying pups were noted. October 3. — Dead pups were counted on Sea Lion Rock — 361 and 1 cow. October 6. — Dead pups were counted on Halfway Point — 1,748 pups, 1 cow; all the bodies were well back, the rookery being washed by surf. On Gorbatch, 1,514 pups, 7 cows, and 2 bulls were found. October 8. — On Zapadni 4,860 pups, 13 cows, and 3 bulls were found west of sand beach; 37 L pups and 2 cows east. On English Bay, 381 pups, 2 cows, and 1 bull were found; on Reef, 3,376 pups, 25 cows, and 8 bulls; on Tolstoi, 2,582 pups, 8 cows, and 1 bull. October 10. — On Northeast Point 4,017 pups, 25 cows, and 4 bulls were found. Little Polovina had 222 dead pups and 1 cow. November 11. — Examination of Reef, Lukanin, Polovina, and Tolstoi demonstrates the fact that the seals there are mixed bachelors, pups, and cows together, and hauled 292 THE FUE SEALS OF THE P.RIBILOF ISLANDS. well back from the water — a condition which it is said has never existed before to such an extent. The seals have seemed restless ever since my return to St. Paul on September 13. Whether this is due to constant disturbance during the summer and breeding season when they were constantly subject to daily scientific and photographic investigation can not be said positively, but such is believed to be the case. The counting of pups starved on the rookeries necessitates the driving off all the seals and is detrimental; it should be stopped.1 November 21. — No seals are on Halfway Point and Lukanin, and the outlook is not very cheerful. November 22. — Few bachelors are on the Beef, and those present are mixed with cows and pups. A drive was ordered and 57 killed ; cows outnumbered the bachelors in the drive. November 25. — On Middle Hill is the only place where killable seals are to be found. The cows are leaving the islands. November 26. — A drive from Reef resulted in the killing of 78 seals. December 9. — Seals have left Lagoon on account of bliz/ard. December 13. — No seals remain on the island ; a few are in the water. 1896. April 13. — Native reports 1 bull seal landed on the Reef, the first seen this season. May 5. — Two roads for seals were cut on the Keel' ; another bull has landed there. May 7. — Six roads were cut at Zapadni; 6 bulls are reported hauled out at this rookery and many are in the water. May 11. — Nine bulls are reported at Zapadni; 4 at Southwest Bay; 1 at Tolstoi; 16 at Reef; 15 at Northeast Point; killable seals are reported at Zapadni and at Northeast Point in the water, also about 60 on Sea Lion Rock. There are 2 bulls at Poloviua. May 13. — One hundred and twenty-one seals are killable for food. June 1. — A dead cow is reported on Rocky Point, crushed by the ice. June 5. — No cows have hauled as yet. About 700 bachelors and bulls are reported at Northeast Point. June 14. — Five cows and 1 pup are on the Reef; about 200 bachelors on the end of Reef; 4 cows, 1 pup, and about 50 killable seals are out on Lukanin. June 23. — A seal drive was made from the west side of Northeast Point and 1,414 seals taken; the following day the east side was driven and 1,408 skins secured. July 13. — A drive was made from the east side of Northeast Point and 1,169 seals killed; the following day the west side was driven and 1,045 killed. 1 This is a mere expression of opinion, and as a matter of fact is an erroneous one. As the experiments of 1896 and 1897 show the seals do not mind such disturbance any more than they do being driven from the hauling grounds. The mixing of seals of various classes, as here noted, always occurs late in the season. See date of August 7, 1876. DAILY JOURNAL OF OBSERVATIONS,1 BY DAVID STARR JORDAN, GEORGE ARCHIBALD CLARK, AND FREDERIC AUGUSTUS LUCAS. 1896. The United States Fish Commission steamer Albatross steamed from Seattle at 9 o'clock a. m., June 24, having on board Dr. David Starr Jordan, commissioner in charge of the American fur-seal investigation; his associates, Dr. Leouhard Stejneger, Mr. Frederic A. Lucas, Capt. Jefferson F. Moser, Mr. Charles H. Townsend, Col. Joseph Murray, and Mr. George A. Clark, and Prof. D'Arcy W. Thompson, represent- ative for Great Britain, and Mr. James M. Macoun, representative for Canada. The vessel reached Dutch Harbor, Unalaska, at 10 o'clock p. m., July 2, and after taking coal steamed, at 8.15 p. m., on July 6, for the Pribilof Islands, arriving at St. George on July 8 at 4 o'clock p. m. JULY 8. NORTH ROOKERY. The members of both commissions immediately landed and visited North rookery, which is located near the village of St. George. This rookery, in the eastern part, lies on a narrow rocky beach at the foot of cliffs 50 to 75 feet in height, affording excellent opportunities for observation. Toward the western end the breeding grounds extend up the slope of the hill formed by the breaking down of the cliff1. A count of 23 harems made by Mr. Clark gave a total of 334 cows, an average of 14 £ to each harem. The harems ranged from .">6 cows in the largest to 1 in the smallest. In another part of the rookery a count of 18 harems by Dr. Jordan gave a total of 218 cows, an average of 12 to a harem. The harems were well defined and carefully guarded by the bulls, which were con- stantly moving about their outskirts rounding up the cows. Occasionally a bull would dash through a harem scattering and trampling the cows in his haste to seize one attempting to escape. The size of the harem seemed not to depend upon the strength of the bull, small bulls having in some cases large harems while large bulls had small ones. Location seemed to be a determining element. In the larger harems the bulls were more active than in the smaller ones, probably because more exertion was necessary. Bulls in neighboring harems were frequently seen to lunge at one another as if about to fight, but nothing came of it. The females* 1 Where not otherwise stated these notes are the work of David S. Jordan and George A. Clark. 293 294 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. for the most part, occupied their attention. The real fighting seen was among the unoccupied bulls, of which there were many holding positions back of the harems. A bull from a harem lower down the slope was seen to seize a cow and drag her down into his circle. An effort was made to count the pups in the 23 harems already referred to, but it was difficult in many cases to tell to what harem scattering pups belonged. In many cases they were grouped in pods, playing among themselves like puppy dogs. In harems where an absolute count was possible, slightly more than one half as many pups as cows were found. Including the pods, in certain cases they seemed to outnumber the cows. One outlying pod numbered 37. The birth of one pup was witnessed from a distance. The little fellow was soon able to move about and in a few minutes was nursing. The mother passed her nose over the pup several times, uttering a noise like that of a sheep, shaking her head, but did not lick or otherwise help it. The old bull sat near by looking on without showing any interest. A number of fresh placentas were to be seen lying about in various places, giving evidence of recent births. No pups were seen to nurse except the newly born one. No dead pups were seen. A considerable number of seals were constantly swimming to and fro in the water in front of the rookery. For the most part the animals seemed to be cows. Messrs. Townseud and Miller photographed the rookery for the American commission. Mr. Macoun also photographed the rookery. Dr. Jordan, Professor Thompson, and Colonel Murray remained overnight at the Government house, the others returning to the ship. JULY 9. Colonel Murray, Professor Thompson, and Treasury Agent Judge went early in the morning to Zapadui to witness the drive and killing there. Dr. Stejneger and Mr. Lucas spent the day in making a count of North rookery. Mr. Macoun remained with them and completed his photographs of that rookery. Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark counted the cows and harems on East, Little East, and Staraya Artel rookeries, and Messrs. Townsend and Miller photographed them. Mr. Marrett photographed them for Professor Thompson. Captain Moser and Mr. Parmeuter, from the Albatross, made hydrographic observations on North rookery. NORTH. The water being rough at the village, it was necessary to land at the end of North rookery in the runway up which the bachelors haul. At the approach of the boat a few of the bachelors hastened into the water, but the main flock remained undisturbed on the hillside above. The harems, which extended up to the edge of the runway, were prevented from stampeding by the bulls in charge, and several idle bulls along the water's edge, at the point of landing, showed fight and would not be driven off. The count of North rookery was made by Dr. Stejneger and Mr. Lucas. A total of 1,413 cows in 78 harems were actually counted, and for 51 other harems bulls were counted and the cows estimated on the basis of the harems counted. The count and estimate give a total of 2,280 cows for the greater part of the rookery; but as the nature of the ground made it impossible to see all the cows, a correction seemed neces- sary, and, in the opinion of Mr. Lucas 3,000, and in that of Dr. Stejneger, 2,700 would COUNT OF LITTLE EAST ROOKERY. 295 be nearer the correct figure for this rookery. This would give for this rookery a total of from 159 to 177 harems aucl from 2,700 to 3,000 cows.1 On comparison, with Mr. Townseud's maps of last year, this rookery shows in several places a shrinkage. Compared with Mr. True's estimate of last year, the harems thus counted by us on North rookery show practically the same average. His total of 5,528 cows counted for 342 harems gives an average of about 18. The total of 1,413 cows for 78 harems gives an average of 18 also. (Lucas.) The pups are podding, i. e. gathering in little groups away from the harems. From their number, one would judge that no cow failed of impregnation last season through lack of virility on the part of the bulls. A harem counted last night contained 43 cows; it contained the same number to-day and at least 40 pups. From their abundance it would seem that nearly all pups are born.2 No dead pups are seen ; 1 pup seen to nurse. (Lucas.) One small harem was located in the path frequented by the bachelors in reaching their hauling grounds. A number of idle bulls, and some half bulls, were holding- positions at the foot of the runway and others were hanging about the rear of the rookery; some were very bold. Many of the bulls were active and vicious. Om> charged 20 feet at an outlying idle bull. A bull lying at the top of the cliff, having a cow and pup, charged a considerable distance at Dr. Stejneger. Three bulls were observed to copulate; time, 6, 6, and 5 minutes, respectively. (Lucas.) LITTLE EAST ROOKERY. Little East rookery is located on a surface strewn with blocks of bowlder lava. It lies back on a gradual slope formed by the breaking down of the cliffs, which everywhere, between the rookery and the village, rise perpendicular from the water. The following detailed count of harems and cows was made by Dr. Jordan : Detailed count of Little East rookery. 2 78(2) 2 3 6 1 16 9 7 10 30 10 3 4 20 9 2 6 40 8 5 24 60(4) Total cows 355 Total harems 27 Average size of harem 13 -f- A duplicate count made by Mr. Clark gave substantially the same results. A group of 78 cows contained 2 bulls, and another of 60 cows contained 4 bulls. These could not be separated into harems. The bulls seemed to have reached some sort of an understanding and were holding the females in common. 'The results of this count, when compared with that made on July 3t by Colonel Murray, in company with Mr. Lucas, which showed 225 harems, seems to give warrant for the belief afterwards arrived at, that the original counts on St. George were made before the rookeries had attained their maximum. The investigations of 1897, however, showed that the count late in July was still less reliable, the real status of the rookery lying somewhere between the two counts. -Later it was found that the pups exceeded the cows two to one; but at this time the current notion that all, or practically all, the cows were present was shared in by us. 296 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. Fewer idle adult bulls were seen on this rookery than on North. Only two were noted, but there were from a dozen to fifteen young half bulls hanging about the rear of the harems. The females seem to be a finer and larger lot than those on North rookery. Fewer pups were seen. Passing by the hauling ground of Little East, from which the small group of holostiaki had stampeded into the water, a seal, either a cow or a bachelor, was seen lying in the shallow water, apparently in distress and unable to get on. It could not be reached for examination and nothing could be done.1 EAST ROOKERY. The bowlder-strewn sloping shore extends from the beginning of Little East rookery all the way down to East rookery, about a mile below Little East, and seems to indicate that the two may have formed at one time one great rookery. East rookery begins with a few scattered harems just beyond the point. Its greatest mass of harems lies back on a gradual slope at the angle of the perpendicular rocky cliff, which is here resumed and continues along the eastern side of the island. On the narrow beach at the foot of this cliff the harems extend for a considerable distance, gradually fading out. From the brow of the cliff, 100 to 150 feet high, there is a good opportunity for observing and counting the seals. The following detailed count of harems was made by Mr. Clark:2 Detailed count of East rookery. 6 7 3 5 1 3 8 3 14 10 24 8 5 11 32 29 5 20 11 5 15 2 3 5 6 4 1 14 7 12 16 5 15 11 7 23 6 1 15 18 22 17 18 27 5 38 7 7 2 11 29 14 3 1 8 4 17 20 3 15 22 2 4 5 8 2 3 8 7 19 3 18 5 1 1 2 1 7 7 5 7 4 15 21 15 5 39 12 7 9 5 5 6 10 . 9 1 20 3 8 15 23 15 5 16 2 7 34 14 1 27 23 2 25 9 1 10 5 15 32 3 1 22 5 15 14 2 1 14 4 38 15 20 42 6 36 6 4 3 2 15 24 7 Total cows 1,584 Total harems 142 Average size of harem 11 Dr. Jordan's count gave 128 harems and 1,682 cows. The average of these two counts gives 135 harems and 1,634 cows, which is very near to the population of this rookery. Eleven idle bulls were counted on East rookery. In addition to these were a number of bulls stationed along the water front, which were attempting to round up and form harems of passing cows. 1 Later observations show that the animal was affected by a form of temporary paralysis due to fright. Several instancevS -were noted while making the counts of pups in October. The animals always quickly recovered. 2 It was found in 1897, when this rookery was more closely inspected, that a section containing in this season about 100 cows was omitted from the count for 1896. The section lay in close proximity to a hauling ground, and it was assumed without close inspection that no breeding seals were there. STARAYA ARTEL ROOKERY. 297 A bull was seen to strike an escaping cow in the mouth ; she, however, got away from him and ran down into the water. In two cases cows coming iu from the water were seen to break away, after being held for a few moments by water bulls, and climb up the rocks to harems above, where they evidently belonged. They were probably cows which were returning from feeding. Many seals here, as on North rookery, were seen sporting in the water, the light- colored bottom making their movements very distinct. The hauling ground of this rookery now occupies a space of about two acres. The seal grass area behind would point to an area of fully 20 acres as once hauled over by the bachelors. A herd of 300 or 400 bachelors were lying on the hauling ground. Pups seem less numerous here thau at North rookery. Forty to 50 large sea lions lay sleeping on the rocks just out of the water. The seals lie about them and pass to and fro, apparently unnoticed by them and not noticing them. The sea lions look like great logs. When disturbed they roll into the water in a lumbering fashion, but soon haul out again. They are doubtless bachelors from the sea-lion rookery farther to the southeast on Tolstoi Point. STARAYA ARTEL ROOKERY. Staraya Artel rookery lies to the west of North rookery and about 2£ miles distant from the village. It occupies a limited shore line, rising into a rather steep slope by a succession of rocky shelves. The hillside breaks off into a perpendicular cliff on the western side and drops in a gradual slope down to a basin-like depression containing a small pond. On the rocky shelves of the beach the harems are well defined, but on the smooth slope above the seals are massed and the harems merge into one another without definite boundaries. This rookery is a very difficult one to count. The very large number of idle bulls which occupy the slope behind make it impossible to closely approach the harems. In order to make any count at all it was necessary for one person to keep off the bulls while the other did the work. Then many of the harems on the shelves could not be seen at all, while at a distance the massed portion of the slope could not be separated into harems. A combination of the partial counts made by Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark gave a total of 59 harems and 910 cows for this rookery. The number of idle bulls on Staraya Artel rookery was unusually large and they were very fierce. Forty-five were counted. They were spread out over a considerable area of ground and were constantly fighting among themselves. Most of the fighting witnessed amounted to nothing more than a bluff. Two bulls would run at one another, lunge forward nearly touching each other, and then return to their stations. The number of scarred and bleeding animals, however, showed evidence of a great deal of actual fighting. The wounds for the most part were upon the scalp, the breast, or at the angle of the fore flipper with the body, this latter seeming to be a favorite place of attack. One of the idle bulls, crowded too near the harems by our approach, made a break for the sea through the rookery. He was immediately attacked by the harem masters, escaping from the clutches of one only to be seized by another below. Sometimes two had him at once. He was passed along through the whole line of harems until finally he was thrown over the cliff into the sea at the foot of the slope. Great confusion was created in the harems by the fighting, but no general stampede occurred. Bach bull soon had his cows rounded up and forced into quiet. 298 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. One dead pup partly eaten by the foxes was found on the path toward the village at some distance from the rookery. It may have been driven off by the foxes and killed, or dragged away after dying from some other cause, but the body was fresh. This rookery shows shrinkage more clearly than the other?. The whole area occupied by idle bulls has evidently been within recent times covered with breeding seals.1 Beyond this area there is a region covered with seal grass which marks an earlier abandonment. The area of the rookery is about one-eighth to one-tenth its former extent. The same evidence of shrinkage is to be seen in the hauling ground which lies at the foot of the slope and back toward the little lake in the basin. There are 300 or 400 bachelors asleep on the hauling ground. As they lie there stretched out they suggest the appearance of the killing ground before the village. The hauling ground, as now occupied, is but about one-tenth its former area.2 Professor Thompson, on his return from Zapadni, displayed a handful of buckshot which had been taken from the bodies of seals at the killing there. JULY 10. The day was unsuitable for photographing. Dr. Jordan, Professor Thompson, and Colonel Murray came on board and the Albatross steamed round to Zapadni with a view to landing and counting that rookery. It was not possible to land and the ship anchored to await the following morning, it being desirable that this rookery should bo counted and photographed, if possible, before leaving for St. Paul Island. JULY 11. A landing was made at Zapadni in the morning and the rookery counted. At noon the photographs were taken. In the afternoon the Albatross, with all on board, steamed for St. Paul, arriving at 6 o'clock in the evening. ZAPADNI ROOKERY. Zapadni rookery lies on the western shore of the island, 5£ miles distant from the village. It occupies a long sloping hill which breaks off into a cliff' on its seaward edge. It resembles in this respect Staraya Artel rookery. The harems were massed upon the side of the hill, on the bench-like plateau at its foot, and on the shingle of the beach beyond the slope. In the latter place they lie in two detached groups. The present area of the rookery seems to be roughly about one-tenth what it once was. Compared with Mr. Townsend's maps of last year, all three sections of the breeding ground show decrease, the southernmost end showing the most. The north and middle sections do not now come above the upper limit of the beach. The decrease of this rookery is even more marked than that of Staraya Artel. 'Later observations showed that this area was regularly occupied by the cows and pups as they hauled back after the breeding season. "It was found later in the season that the bachelors shifted much upon the hauling grounds, and so the abandonment in territory can not be taken as a direct measure of the reduction of the bachelor herd, as a few seals can denude a considerable area of ground in a short time if they move about- over it. ZAPADNI ROOKERY OF ST. GEORGE. 299 The southern part of the rookery was divided into three parts. The bench itself was counted by Mr. Macoun and Dr. Stejneger. Twenty-five bulls with harems and 500 cows were found. The slope was counted by Dr. Stejneger, and contained 10 harems, 160 cows. The beach below could only be estimated, and was placed by Dr. Stejneger and Mr. Macoun at 40 harems, 600 cows. Messrs. Macouu and Townsend counted the middle part, finding 36 harems and 450 cows. The northern portion was counted by Dr. Jordan, Professor Thompson, and Colonel Murray, their counts being respectively 298, 312, and 263 cows. Mr. Townseud counted 29 harems; Professor Thompson 32. For the whole rookery, combining these results, there were found to be 143 harems, 2,006 cows, an average of slightly over 13 per harem. A record of individual harems was not kept on this rookery. The count was necessarily imperfect and unsatisfactory. The number of idle bulls on Zapadni was unusually large. Between 150 and 175 were counted, the greater part being behind on the slope of the hill, and apparently indicating a greater falling off in the southern portion. The idle bulls here, as on Staraya Artel, were very bold and quarrelsome. They could scarcely be made to move. One fellow held his position, and even charged up the hill at us, though repeatedly struck with stones. While the photographing was in progress a bull charged at the camera, which had to be abandoned and was rescued with difficulty. On this rookery, as on Staraya Artel, there are apparently twice as many bulls as needed. It would be well if half of them were shot. Among the outlying bulls was seen one of the largest and best looking on the rookery. The success of a bull in securing a harem evidently depends more upon favorableness of location than upon fighting qualities. Bulls near the water have the best chance. The incoming cows are taken by them or absorbed by other harems before they reach the rear where the idle bulls are. If the idle bulls get cows they must steal them. Many attempts to steal cows were witnessed. None seemed to meet with success, so far as the idle bulls were concerned, though one instance was noted where a bull in a harem lower down the beach stole a cow from the harem above and transferred her to his own. Every commotion among the seals is the signal for numerous fights. The bulls usually roar and blow out their breath in a threatening manner before biting. They have a wholesome dread of each other's teeth. Two half-bulls, each alone, were seen on the top of the hill at a considerable distance from the rest, probably driven off. Occasionally a half-bull attempts to break through the harems. But woe to the one attempting it. The harem masters make common cause against him, and he is lucky if he gets away to the sea with his life. Many of the bulls on Zapadni show scars, evidence of fights they have been in. One pretty cow was seen with a badly bitten shoulder. One unlucky bull lay near by with several bad cuts. A bull with a single cow seized and shook her, making a cut in her neck apparently 6 inches long. One female pup, an estray, very feeble, was found on the crest of the hill above the rookery. Many bones of pups lay just inland of the northern section of the rookery. Pups were numerous and podding. One dead pup lay at a distance from 15184, PT 2 4 300 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. any harem, probably drowned and washed up; it was gnawed by the foxes. One dead and one living pup were found in another spot at a distance from the rookery, probably carried away by the bachelors. The yearling bachelors are to be seen in little pods of half a dozen or so. They appear to be as much afraid of the idle bulls that fringe their hauling ground as of men. All the bachelors, large or small, are timorous and flee from man, as well as from the bulls. Where the bachelor yearlings are at a distance from interference they play among themselves like little dogs, rolling about and biting each other, squealing when bitten. They compare with dogs of the same age much as Aleuts do with white children. There is not much intelligence, flexibility, or savoir-faire about them. In like manner the big, senseless, howling bulls compare to great, lusty boys. Similar comparisons might be made for the 2-year olds, which are bigger than the yearlings — nearly as large as the cows. Cows are females of 3 years or more Half-bulls are males of 4 or 5 years. In our efforts to count the harems it frequently happens that a herd of bachelors will be startled, but on crouching down they soon become quiet. They seem not to have good eyesight, but their sense of smell is more acute,1 and if you are on the windward side they become excited at much longer range, and when startled seldom stop until they reach the sea, if the way is clear. They behave much as a flock of sheep would. Sometimes they watch you with curious, but ineffective intelligence, behaving like squirrels. One good-natured, sleepy bull was disturbed by the commotion and awakened yawning and bleating in a high-pitched tone like that of a cow. One case of copulation was seen. Yellowish excrement, apparently voided by bachelors, was seen on Zapadni rookery in two places outside the harems. PRELIMINARY CENSUS OF ST. GEORGE.2 We may here summarize the results of the foregoing counts on the rookeries of St. George as follows : .Rookeries. Harems. Cows. 168 2 850 Little East .. 27 355 East 135 1,634 Zapadni 143 2,006 Starava Artel 59 910 Total 532 7,755 a An average of the estimates of Dr. Stejneger and of Mr. Lucas, the former estimating 159 harems and 2,700 cows; the latter 3,000 cows, which would increase the harems to 177. JULY 12. Landing was made at St. Paul Island during the morning, Colonel Murray taking up quarters at the Government House, the others at the company's house. In the afternoon Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark made a partial count of Kitovi rookery. 1 Subsequent observations lead us to doubt the reported superiority of the sense of smell in the seal. It is probable that from the windward side the sense of hearing and of smell both are quickened. -These figures were considerably altered after completing the census in St. Paul. COUNT OF LAGOON ROOKERY. KITOVI ROOKERY. 301 This rookery lies on the eastern side of the island about half a mile from the village. It begins with a few scattered hareius along the bowlder beach of Kitovi Bay, widening out at the point where the seals lie on the broken lava columns. The space to the northward is very irregular, with numerous cross ridges. At the northern end it spreads out into a broad amphitheater-like slope. A sharp ridge of rocks forming the angle of Lukanin Hill separates it from that rookery. The two rookeries are really one large breeding ground. The hasty count made showed 174 harems with 2,510 cows. A more accurate count will be made later. JULY 13. Dr. Stejneger and Mr. Lucas spent the day in making a count of Kitovi rookery. Colonel Murray counted breeding bulls on this and Lukanin rookery. Mr. Towusend and Mr. Miller photographed Kitovi, Lukauin, and Gorbatch, Mr. Townsend making a count of the cows on that part of the Beef commonly known as the " slide." Dr. Jordan and Mr. Macoun counted the cows on Lagoon rookery from a boat. In the afternoon Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark visited Gorbatch. The weather was characterized by moderate westerly winds. The sky was cloudy, with light rain and fog at intervals in the afternoon. Temperature, 42; barometer, 29.90. LAGOON ROOKERY. This rookery occupies the middle portion of the rocky spit which projects from the cliffs of Tolstoi Point and shuts off the entrance to the salt lagoon except for a narrow channel. The waterworn bowlders are piled up in a ridge, probably in large part by the action of the ice. On the seaward slope of this ridge most of the harems are located. A few lie on the flat behind, at the top. The following is the detailed count of Lagoon rookery by harems : Count of Lagoon rookery. 2 12 3 2 17 8 11 27 29 7 30 11 15 11 10 8 10 17 12 12 2 3 64 •12 13 24 12 13 4 12 5 10 ir, 8 40 4 15 10 15 10 15 8 1 IT. 5 6 1 1 4 20 21 8 10 18 20 2 5 14 20 2 6 7 16 3 45 2 3 7 L'd 10 32 14 6 5 24 18 38 20 10 10 42 0 7 5 11 7 10 10 15 20 15 27 4 19 19 18 20 8 15 3 1 8 1 1 1 1 13 19 14 •2 12 8 3 19 1 7 10 13 6 6 Total cows 1, 474 Total harems 120 Average size of harems 12. 3 There were very few idle bulls on this rookery, and as a result but little fighting. A small pod of bachelors are hauled out on the lagoon side of the ridge. They either come around through the narrow channel or else cross over at the foot of the cliff, where the harems fade out. The rookery is not accessible for driving and no seals are taken from it. 302 THE FUR SEALS OP THE PRIBILOP ISLANDS. The cows are almost as cowardly as the yearling bachelors. They run away from their pups without scruple unless prevented by the bulls. They also show a disposi- tion to bite and maltreat strange pups that come within their reach. They show no fondness for nor care of their young. No dead pups were seen on this rookery. A bull was seen to take a cow by the hind flippers and carry her a considerable distance. She was afterwards rescued by the bull in the harem to which she belonged. GORBATCH ROOKERY. A visit was paid in the afternoon to Gorbatch rookery by Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark, but no attempt at a count was made. The rookery lies along the southeast side of the bay of Zoltoi. Beginning a short distance beyond Zoltoi sands, the harems are situated on the bowlder beach at the foot of cliffs which rise to the height of 20 or 30 feet, topped by grass-grown sand dunes. This cliff breaks down later on in along rocky slope, which shades into a slope of lava rocks in place, and again into a long cinder slope which rises to the plateau of the parade grounds above. On the westward side this cinder slope is abruptly terminated in perpendicular cliffs. The harems are scattered about among the rocks and massed along the foot of the cinder slope. Among the sand dunes at the top of the cliff and all along the cinder slope to its top were many idle bulls. By using care and stones it was possible to make a way through these bulls, and thus get a view of the harems as they lay massed at the foot of the slope. One or two bulls with single cows were just in the rear of the regular harems. These were evidently idle bulls that had stolen cows. The idle bulls were mostly asleep. When disturbed they lunged at one another as though to take revenge for being disturbed. An idle bull was seen to seize a pup and carry it several yards up the slope. The master of the harem to which it belonged started after him and made him drop it. The pup walked about in a bewildered sort of a way, but would probably get back to the harem. Six dead pups were seen scattered along the slope well up among the idle bulls. They had probably been carried away by the bulls or crushed in their struggles while straying among them.1 One lone pup was seen to wander up the hill in the wake of a flock of bachelors. The cows pay no attention to the pups, but let them stray where they please. It is more and more evident that the seals have little fear of man when he is not in motion or is moving in a stooped position. When you lie down they can not tell you from the rocks. When you stand up against the sky line and move about they are confused and afraid. ARD1GUEN ROOKERY. On Ardiguen one unlucky yearling male is seen to invade a harem and get routed out by the hoarse and furious old bull. The young bachelors seem to be a little slimmer than the cows of the same size, but it is hard to distinguish them. Even the cows strike at the young bull. "One doesn't know boys," they seem to say. The 'Later observations seem to point to the fact that these were pups, sick from Uncinaria, Avhieh had crawled out of the harems to die. GORBATCH AND KITOVI ROOKERIES. 303 yearling is afraid to go off alone, though every bull he comes near chases him and bellows at him. It may be that the young male was born in this rookery and instinct brings him back to the spot. He is fast learning that it is a place where he is not wanted. A big, greenish-backed female in the harem in the head of Ardigueu tries to run away, but the bull seizes her by the neck and beats her nose against the rock till it bleeds. He dragged her back into the harem by main force. She bites him in the neck, but has to submit. Sex equality is not the rule here. She remonstrates and the bull scolds. The cows and bulls seem to converse mouth to mouth. The breeding ground1 on which the above observations were made consists of a small group of isolated harems, 27 in all, this season, containing 652 cows, as counted by Mr. Townsend on July 13, which lie in a particularly favorable location for observation. The harems are scattered along the rocky beach for a distance of several hundred yards. Xear the southern extremity a gully leads up and back to the level of the hauling ground of Reef rookery. In the gully itself and on the flat about its mouth are a number of harems. At the side of the gully toward Gorbatch the cliff rises to a considerable height and overhangs these harems, affording a view at close range without disturbing the animals. Pups and cows seem to be present on this rookery in equal numbers. The pups are podding back from the harems in the massed portion of the slope. On the level above the slope lies a bull which has been dead for some time. He is too far decomposed to permit of examination as to the cause of death. GORBATCH. A few half bulls and bachelors are on the level parade ground above the cinder slope. In early times the space used to be covered with them crossing over and back between the Beef and Gorbatch. They are seldom seen to cross now. Whole harems of seals are to be seen stretched out sleeping. Some lie on their backs with their flippers folded up. Others lie on their bellies with their flippers folded under them. Still others with their flippers stretched out on either side and behind. They have as many attitudes as a dog on a hot day. Occasionally a cow or a bull is to be seen asleep, sitting up with head thrown back and nose in the air. Others hang limply over rocks, with heads hanging down. The idle bulls are a fine lot. The younger bulls are grizzled on the back of the neck. In another stage they are black with brownish edgings. The oldest bulls show the brownish mane, or even the whole body a buffalo color. Occasionally one has a shade of warm yellow. The cows are all shades of dove color, mouse color, dark brown, silvery gray, and warm brown. There is much less variation in size among them than among the bulls. DR. STEJNEGER'S NOTES ON KITOVI ROOKERY. Beginning at photographic station 12, at the boundary line between Lukanin and Kitovi rookery, Mr. Lucas and myself spent the day in counting the cows by harems around to Kitovi Point. Beyond the point it was found impracticable to 'From the frequency of our subsequent observations ou this territory a separate name was afterwards ^iven to it — Ardiosterior nipples, 1 foot 9 inches; girth around anterior nipples, 2 feet 2£ inches; girth of shoulders, 2 feet 9 inches. Weight, 73 pounds. In examining external characters the vagina was seen to be distended, its lining walls thickened, fleshy, and wrinkled. The nipples were dark in color, and moderately protuberant; the subcutaneous layer of fat abundant. The mammary glands contained a very little milk; were functionally well developed; their tissue, nearly an inch thick in the region between the posterior nipples, was found to thin out gradually anteriorly, the tissue extending from the pubic symphysis to within about 8 inches beyond the front of the anterior nipples, and the posterior glands on both sides merging together in one continuous sheet. The upper edge of the gland was in line of the upper axil, and along the median side of the body. In the bicornuate uterus the right horn was thickened and dilated to about half the size of one's fist. The ovaries were smooth, about the size of a walnut, the right exhibiting a single scar. The left showed one large and several small graaflau follicles. The scar showed that the animal had bred once. No rupture was evident on the left side, but the follicle was ready for rupture. The animal was therefore not a virgin, but apparently a young cow which had lost her pup, and, having no further interest on the rookery, had gone to sea, and in lauding had taken up with the young bull on Zoltoi. ZOLTOI SANDS. In some conditions of weather the bachelors lie on the flat sand at Zoltoi, but not often. There are, however, always hundreds of them hauled up on the stony southeast edge of the sands. They haul out at the angle of the bluff and then go straight up to the bowlder-strewn slope where the sand is firm over the underlying blocks of lava. The seals find it very hard to walk on sand at all, or to creep up from the sea directly on the sand beaches. They slip back at every step. It is not easy for a man to walk over these sands. But at the angle of Zoltoi Bluff, where the sands are beaten hard SIVUTCH ROCK AND AKDIGUEN. 321 and flat, the lauding is easy. Here the seals come and go all the time, and the bluft' above the sand is a favorite location for them. A bull and cow, which seem to be the same as were seen this morning when the young cow was shot, are now out in the sea, a rod from the shore. They come ashore together and the bull drives a bachelor away. It is evidently the same pair. The male has a big cut iu the side. At 4 p. in., on our return, both are gone again. SIVUTCH BOCK. With a glass from the rock pile back of the Beef one can make out about 27 l harems of moderate size scattered along the beach of the concave western shore of Sivutch islet. About 150 bachelors are hauled up on the north end. The bulk of them seem small. No drives are made from this island, though occasional killings are made there in the early spring, the first bachelors usually hauling out there. ARDIGUEN. Harem A had 7 cows; B, 19; C, 29 only; D, 27. The young bachelor is apparently gone. Harem E has 9 cows; F, 6; G, 9. One cow in D is wet. The cows are asleep in lazy attitudes, but they waken occasionally and tight sleepily. The young bachelor has evidently returned. He is driven out of B into D by the angry bull. Wherever he goes the cows are in a turmoil and bite at him. He is now among the pups at the bottom of D. Passes a noisy cow, who strikes at him ; tramples on pups of F and goes on dragging his hind legs over pups and upsetting them. He can be traced down to H, where he goes reluctantly.2 The bull calf paddles down to the harem at the very foot slowly and reluctantly, trampling all the pups he can ; they recover themselves rapidly. At a distance beyond harem C there is a big black bull, with a cow and pup, evidently a new harem, which we may call X. The old cow with the green fur, now silvery, formerly in A, is now in charge of an idle bull a rod higher up. We may call this harem Y. JULY 18. The day was spent on board the Albatross dredging 0 miles oft' Zapadni Head. The weather was very rough. Heavy rain fell during the whole day. Dr. Stejueger remained on board the vessel, it being arranged that the A Ibatross should sail in the night for Uualaska to take coal and steam for the Commander Islands. Mr. Towusend also remained to accompany the vessel to Unalaska, where he will remain until August 10, getting information among the officers of the sealing vessels which are now coming in to fit up for the Bering Sea cruise. JULY 19. Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark visited Gorbatch rookery. Weather very disagreeable, with alternate fog and rain, southeasterly winds. Thermometer 42; barometer 30.20. 1 Inspection of this island in August, 1896, showed the rookery to be much larger, and in 1897 a count made from a boat showed 102 harems. 2 This may have been a yearling cow. In 1897 a young cow of this sort was seen to shift about among the harems under Lukaniu Cliff for about 10 days, always avoiding the attentions of the bulls, and consequently apparently attacked by thorn. 322 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. GORBATCH. Under the cliffs of Gorbatcli rookery a half bull about 10 feet from shore is seen copulating with a little cow. The cow's head is under water two-thirds of the time. She rests on the rocks in shallow water. Another bull tries to interfere and disturbs the copulating, which is resumed after the intruder is driven off. The cow is half drowned and both animals are repeatedly rolled over by the surf. A cow goes out to sea; her bull remonstrates and follows her into the water neck deep, but she gets away. He chases her under the water. Two seals on a rock snatch at a sea bird which skims over them in its flight. Some of the natives have the absurd notion that the shrinkage from Townseud's crosses is due to the fact that the white crosses scare them. On a cairn of stones where Captain Moser placed a white flag while making hydrographic observations, a half bull is now perched close to the flag, of which he seems very proud. It marks his castle, as it were. Cows in the rain move out of the puddles and perch upon rocks in all sorts of attitudes. A favorite position when rain is falling is to sit up like a dog with the head thrown far back. A dead half bull at Zoltoi lies on the beach, badly cut about the breast and flippers. ARDIGUEN. This rookery was visited about 4 p. m. The weather is cold and rainy. Harem A has moved up 15 feet nearer the rocks and has 7 cows, his original number. Another bull from behind is located in his former place, but has lost the cow he had stolen the other day from A's harem. We have designated him as Y. There is no difficulty in recognizing the cow by the peculiar color of her neck, though now that she is dry this is not very marked. Harem B has only 10 cows; C, 23, spread out and climbing on the rocks, probably because of the muddy condition of the harem, due to the rain. Harem X has 1 cow and 2 pups. D's harem is much spread out with 15 cows. Harem E has 3; F, 17; 0,2. Pups are still being born, red placentas are lying about. The cows are much more scattered, probably to avoid mud. JULY 20. Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark visited Gorbatcli and Reef in the forenoon and Lukanin in the afternoon. Mr. Lucas made a count of Lukanin rookery. Weather cloudy, with thick fog at times; strong southeasterly winds. Ther- mometer, 44; barometer, 30.40. A semi-albino half bull, 5 years old, is to-day on Zoltoi sands with some 40 others, nearly all 5-year-olds, some 4, some younger. Six single-cow harems lie at the back of the massed portion of Gorbatcli, where not more than two were to be seen yesterday. It is probable that the idle bulls succeed later on in establishing many of these harems. A bull was seen to enter a harem and carry off a cow a distance of 20 feet, holding her against two other idle bulls which attacked him. He kept the cow for a few minutes, but she escaped and got back into the harem to which she belonged. This seems to be the regular process by which the small harems in the rear grow. COUNT OF HAREMS ON LUKANIN. 323 ARDIGUEN. The harems on Ardiguen were visited at 5 o'clock to-day. A heavy wind, with driving fog, was blowing across the Keef. With the exception of the harems on the flat the seals were protected from its effects. The following is the count of the harems : A, 4; B, 6; C, 25; D, 14; E, 3; F, 17; Y, 0; X, 4. The cow with the peculiarly marked neck is gone. This is the first time she has been missed since the 13th, when she had evidently just arrived. A wet cow is seen to land and make her way up the slide taking her place in C. She calls and is plainly hunting for her pup. For the 73 cows now visible in the typical harems there are 192 pups. Of course they may come up from the harems below, and yet these show a fair percentage of pups.1 MR. LUCAS'S NOTES ON LUKANIN. A count of the cows in 59 harems on Lukanin gave a total of 848 cows, an average of 14.3 to a harem. For the rest of the rookery only harems could be counted. Eighty-eight additional harems were found. Estimating these on the basis of those counted, they would represent 1,167 cows, or for the entire rookery 2,015. But an unusual number of cows are coming and going, and it is evident that the population of the rookery is breaking up, though the original harems are still clearly marked by the presence of the bulls. The average of Kitovi rookery, which Lukanin resembles in many respects, is therefore a safer one to apply, and this would give a total of 2,543 cows for the 147 harems of Lukanin. Five dead pups were seen on Lukauin, one with placenta attached; all probably trampled while young. Saw a few fresh placentas lying about, and two or three newly born pups. Two pups were bitten, probably by cows. A pup was seen born. Its mother was a silvery gray cow. Silver- gray cows are young; adult cows are brownish. Pups podding and nursing. A wet cow hunts for her pup and finds it, but makes it wait until she is dry before she lets it nurse. Cows coming and going in spite of strong surf. The customary number of idle and half bulls back of rookery. Harems seem to be disintegrating. Nine harems were counted as follows: 18, 10, 11, 33, 20, 13, 23, 13, 11; a total of 151 cows in an area of about 102 by 80 feet. This would give space of 274 feet to each animal, including pups. This is a fairly dense patch of harems, not nearly so dense as the massed areas, but above the average of the rocky ground. A lone cow is teasing a young half bull in the surf. One bull seen with injured jaw, one front canine broken and bent forward. Females crane their necks and look at you with sleepy curiosity. Seals are not much alarmed at man. They soon lose their sense of fear when you have passed. The drives do not run close to any rookery and do not alarm the harems. Killable seals stay away from the rookeries on their special hauling grounds. A big bull copulating occupies four minutes. Another cow clings to him admiringly. The bull growls a good deal, and keeps his mouth open nearly all the 1 Later observations showed that at no time were more than half of the cows out atone time, and at this date in the breeding season the number present was considerably less than half, as shown by the investigations of 1897. 324 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. time. The cow creeps off and the bull sits down, mouth open, and fans himself with one flipper. Then he rolls over and fans himself with both flippers. A pup begins to play with the moving flippers. In their fights the bulls strike for the most part at the base of the fore flipper. Nearly every old bull has scars there. JULY 21. Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark visited the Reef and Gorbatch in the morning, and went with Mr. Lucas to Tolstoi in the afternoon. Weather fair, with light clouds; southeasterly breezes. Thermometer, 44; barometer, 30.48. ZOLTOI. At the angle of Zoltoi sands with the rocky cliff, which seems to be a sort of receiving hospital for injured bulls, a large number of wounded animals are constantly to be seen hanging about the edge of the water. Some of them- are terribly cut tip. A number of these invalids have been killed and dissected, and the results are recorded by Mr. Lucas in the chapter on the mortality of seals. There are 150 half bulls hauled out on the slope at Zoltoi; there are only two or three killable seals among them. These half bulls have probably been driven several times already, and will undoubtedly appear in the next drive. There is a prehistoric pile of bones on the rock plateau above Zoltoi. The bones contain skulls of bulls and seals of all ages; there are the bones of sea lions and all kinds of birds, foxes, etc. This pile of bones was photographed in 1892 by the British commission to illustrate the myth of the " carcass-strewn " driveways. As a matter of fact the Eeef drive does not pass within a hundred yards of the spot. The skeleton of a seal buried in the sand looks surprisingly like the imprint of bones found in the rock at Roblar, near Paso Robles, Cal. These were supposed by some to be the bones of prehistoric man. They may have been the bones of a seal or sea lion. Looking over Townsend's photographs of Reef rookery for 1892 and 1895, one can see plainly a large falling off at the later date on all the massed portions. When we compare photographs for 1894 and 1895 for Reef we do not find the difference so striking. ARDIGUEN. Harem A has moved well up under the lee of the cliff, with but 1 cow. Y remains in the old position of A, but with no cow. Harem B has 5 cows; C, 30. Harem X has 6 cows and is growing right along. Harem D has 14 cows; 2 of them show by their wet coats that they have just come from the water. The bull belonging to E is gone; 7 cows lie about the old position: F has 5 cows; G, 15, lying about asleep. The bull of E is seen lying down below G fast asleep; seems considerably cut. There is a wet cow climbing up to C. A pup ejects a quantity of cream-colored excrement. RECOUNT OF TOLSTOI BLUFFS. 325 MR. LUCAS'S NOTES. ARDIGUEN. At 11 o'clock 2 cows coine out of the water and come directly up the gully to harems, where they arrive at 11.5. Oue cow ascends a rock and seems in no hurry to find her pup; the other looks about and calls loudly; walks over one end of a mass of 30 pups; turns about so as to face them; lingers, then goes over to outlying pups and noses some of them; snaps at them; comes back to the bunch of 30; noses and snaps over them as they wake up. At 11.17 she finds a pup which she recognizes and allows to nurse; clears away enough pups to make room and sits up and dozes; appears tired and sleepy. The pup nurses the wet cow, shifting from nipple to nipple on the left side. About 150 young bulls from 3 to 5 years old are to the south of Zoltoi Sands. Two dead pups on Gorbatch; cow lies with her nose immediately above 1, which has lost patches of far; pups podding, about 60 in a solid mass and 15 others near. Two fresh placentas are seen in harems where two or three pups have already turned quite gray. At southern end of Gorbatch is a pup with placenta attached. In some harems cows are coming and going from the sea. They do not seem to go direct, but tarry here and there as they go, working from harem to harem. Pups are seen to defecate on the ground, but the excrement is quickly trampled up and rendered unrecognizable. The same is true of the excrement of the cows. There is no lack of excrement, however, either on the breeding grounds or on the hauling grounds. TOLSTOI. In afternoon I recounted Tolstoi bluffs in company with Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark. Count by harems. 4 11 20 6 7 15 26 8 14 9 23 22 5 26 1 20 7 1 12 10 13 11 6 18 1 9 7 5 4 2 26 10 12 1 22 9 18 3 9 10 5 9 13 17 7 24 2 1 22 7 1 2 17 10 4 11 1 23 3 7 2 19 4 5 14 1 10 1 7 17 18 6 10 2 7 22 6 7 4 7 3 6 11 6 2 14 1 7 7 7 4 18 3 3 6 5 1 7 4 3 8 9 7 4 7 3 Harems, 114; cows, 954; average, 8.3. Harems, 108; cows, 1,498; average, 13.94 (July 14, 1896). Harems, 113; cows, 1,539; average, 13 + (Towuseml, July 11, 189")). Hareius, 107; cows, 1,624; average, 15 (True, July 11, 1895). DR. JORDAN'S NOTES. TOLSTOI SAND FLAT. Pups are podding and swarming like bees around the mass of the harems. Two recently born pups are seen. There are 5 dead ones. Three of the dead pups are on the sand. Under the cliffs at the headland a young dead pup was seen alone near an idle bull. Two small dead pups are seen in a harem. The cows have their own way, anyhow, and go whither they please finally. Those sitting on the rocks, fanning themselves .after coining out of the water, look amazingly 326 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. like lizards. Bulls and cows both weep a great deal, keeping up a steady lachrymal flow, making a dark stain behind and below the eye. A bull is seen copulating on Tolstoi. The cow is in an awkward position and he is apparently unsuccessful within half an hour. A bull and cow about to copulate near a newly born pup threaten to crush it. The mother drags away the pup, which is not more than a few hours old, having the placenta, still red, attached. The cow finally gets her pup into a safe place. The cows move their pups as a cat does her kittens — by the nape of the neck. An attempt to carry a wandering pup that way proved dangerous. The skin on the neck was not loose enough and the pup's sharp teeth are too ready too bite. It is not wise to attempt to pick up a lively pup in that way. The bulls patiently and indifferently father all the pups attached to their harems. Most ignore the presence of the little fellows. The cows are apparently never jealous and like to be in a crowd. Pups have the temper of the old bulls and are fierce enough. They cry like children. A stray pup is exceedingly cross when touched. JULY 22. Mr. Lucas visited the typical harems on the Eeef slide, Ardiguen, in the forenoon, and in the afternoon went with Dr. Jordan to Kitovi rookery. Colonel Murray counted the harems on Lagoon rookery. Mr. Macoun photographed Eeef rookery. A dense fog prevailed during the forenoon, clearing away at noon; wind still from the southeast; thermometer, 44; barometer, 30.5G. Colonel Murray reported 115 harems as the result of his count of Lagoon rookery, made from a boat. The original count was 120. It is likely that he omitted to count some of the harems toward the back or landward side. KITOVI. A cow all alone with a pup was seen some rods above Kitovi. She must have landed and borne her pup alone, finding no harem. She is 100 yards south of the rookery. She is much alarmed by our approach, but stays by the pup, which is still very young. The placenta lies near it. She runs away at last, leaving her pup. A big rotting sea-lion carcass lies near by. A little pup was found wandering off behind the rookery. He was starving and nearly dead. He was killed. Even half-starved he was very tenacious of life, and revived three times after clubbing. Much so called teasing of bulls by the cows is the result of the bull's effort to stop the cow from doing something she wants to do. This teasing on the water's edge means that the cow either wishes to leave the water to seek her harem or wishes to go to sea, and is being prevented by the bull, who places himself in her way. She bites him on the neck and breast, sometimes in the mouth. It does not show that the cow is in heat or that the bull lacks virility; at least it is susceptible in many cases of an easier and more rational solution. In nearly every instance the cow finally gets away to the sea or to her harem above. On Ardiguen a female leaves her own harem and starts for the water. She is intercepted and held by the bull in an adjacent harem. After a little interviewing and smelling she is allowed to escape. A cow in a near harem is restless and seems to wish to leave, but is prevented by the bull. NOTES ON KITOVI ROOKERY. 327 A cow at Lukaniu Point tries to get to the water and is pursued a long way by her own bull, then right and left by four other bulls, the last one on the water's edge. She remonstrates and explains, biting at them. One nearly breaks her neck. The cliff is dangerously high. She dare not drop off the cliff into the water. Cows in the harem bite at her. She finally escapes by making a long detour, but has to stop frequently to rest. Cows returning do not seem to have the same difficulty. When a cow wishes to take to the water her own bull remonstrates with her. Then the bulls through whose domains she goes try to detain her. In the end, how- ever, she has her own way. Often the bulls come to blows — that is, to blowing their strong, musky breath at each other, like rival journalists. Cows often seem to forget what they started out for and go back to the harem. The purposelessness of action is very characteristic of harem life. When cows come in from the water they seem hampered by their wet coats, and are discouragiugly deliberate about hunting up their pups. It makes one tired to watch them, they are in so little of a hurry. It is said that they do not let their pups nurse, even if they find them, before they get dry. Cows have, however, been seen to nurse their pups almost immediately after finding them, and while quite wet. Two cows come out of the water apparently with some idea of where their pups are. They call and two pups come, and after being smelled over are accepted. One nurses the wet mother, the other is made to wait. — (Mr. Lucas.) The bachelors are full of curiosity, coming to look at us if we sit down. Four- year-olds swim all about the edge of the rookeries like whales, at home in the water though despised on land. There is need of a manual for the guidance of young bulls. They laud from the sea on the domain of the idle bull and are lucky if they escape scalped. The same thing happens if they get into the breeding ground. Cows are near-sighted. They do not notice one at all unless he is above the level or moving. An exception to this seems to be when a seal comes to the surface of the water to breathe. Then the animal seems to catch sight of the person walking or standing on the shore even at a considerable distance. It will make a quick dive and hasten oft' through the water, soon, however, coming to the surface, gazing curiously at the object of alarm. The seal's senses are less acute than those of many other animals. It has too few enemies to make accuracy of sense perception necessary. The sun comes out hot and every hind flipper on the rookery goes like a fan. The day is unusually clear and hot for St. Paul. Such a day as this is unfavorable for driving, and yesterday it was necessary to turn a thousand seals back into the sea and discontinue the killing, because of the untimely appearance of the sun. To make the seals exert themselves in such weather or undergo any unusual excitement would be disastrous. JULY 23. Mr. Lucas and Professor Thompson went early to Polovina to witness the drive, and afterwards to inspect the rookeries. Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark also visited the same rookeries later in the day. Weather cloudy; wind from north, changing to northwest. Thermometer 44; barometer 30.44. 328 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PKIBILOF ISLANDS. ME. LUCAS'S NOTES. THE KILLING AT POLOVINA. At the drive 585 seals were killed and skinned; 344 were rejected because too small and 313 because too large. The percentage of small ones was greater than in the Reef drive, of the total drive of 1,242 only 47.14 per cent being killed. The drive was a very short and easy one, over smooth, grassy, 'rolling country, but the seals seemed very excitable and much exhausted. The excitable condition seemed also characteristic of the seals on the rookery. One could scarcely approach them without causing great commotion. On the killing ground the rejected seals could scarcely be driven away. After leaving, they loitered along, lying down and fanning themselves. Some of them went round the pond ; the majority went in and stayed some time. Coming out, they rested, going to the rise above beach and again resting before going into the water. They seemed much afraid of being separated; if one moved off, others would rush after. One seemed to urge on the other, and they move more rapidly in bands than when single or in twos and threes. Going down the beach to the sea they strung out in a long line, the leader being usually a small seal whose light weight enabled him to move faster. The larger seals sat down from time to time, but did not like to be left behind. As soon as they entered the water they lay down in it. In a few moments they swam off in a long curve toward their hauling grounds, some going out a mile or so before turning. One yearling gets away with a fractured skull and will die; one fell near the killers and was clubbed; a third was found dead later on. The injured ones are small seals that have been struck by accident. It is impossible to avoid accidents of this sort, notwithstanding the care the clubbers exercise, for the seals crowd together in a compact mass. However, the proportion of such accidents is small, and the vitality of the animals is extraordinary. At the killing twenty stomachs were examined and found to be empty, except for some mucus and bile. Two contained a little fresh blood. NOTES OF DR. JORDAN AND MR. CLARK. POLOVINA. At the point where the sand beach joins with the rocks 8 dead pups were counted near together in the first three harems. The bulls seemed very savage, and from the appearance of the pups one might easily suppose that they had been trampled in the sand. The greatest number of dead pups seen on the rookeries have been on these sandy beaches. On the rocks the examples are not numerous. Perhaps the pups are smothered in dust as well as crushed, and the smothering does not happen on the rocks. IsTine more dead pups and 1 dead cow were noted on the flat slope above. Some of these might have been crushed by the idle bulls, which were numerous. While looking for dead pups a big bull is seen to lunge and fall with his breast on a pup. It wriggles off. A smaller one would have been crushed flat. Some of the dead are at a distance back of the harems, and may have wandered there and died of starvation. One pup was found with his head crushed and covered with pus, almost dead. It was killed. The pup's head might have been bitten by a bull. A fresh placenta was seen, showing that pups are still being born. COUNT OF PUPS ON POLOVINA CLIFFS. 329 LITTLE POLOVINA. Little Polovina is a pretty little rookery, but not easily counted, as there is uo place from wliicli it can be looked down upon, and it spreads out over an irregular rocky slope. It might spread out indefinitely along its rocky reef, like Lagoon or Zapadni Reef. There are 45 harems in the rookery. The bulls seem very fierce and the cows restless here, as at the main rookery. Behind the rookery are many idle bulls. One bull left his harem of 5 or 6 cows to attack an idle bull lying near, and his harem stampeded into the next bull's flock. He looked back and saw what had happened, paused a moment, and then went with still greater vigor after the idle bull, as if to be revenged. He returned later with a torn eye to the place where his harem had been, but while we remained he did not regain any part of his flock. POLOVINA CLIFFS. An attempt was made to count pups in the patches between Little Polovina and the main rookery, but with no great success, as it was not possible to get near enough to the harems to see all the pups in the crevices of the rocks without stam- peding the cows. Many of them took to the water as it was, despite the restraining efforts of the frantic bulls. There were many illustrations of the fact that when a cow wants to go to the water the bull can not in the long run stop her, though he may try to do so and succeed for a time. A wet cow is seen fighting to get past a wet bull at the water's edge. The efforts of cows to get past bulls to the water have certainly been wrongly interpreted when regarded as the teasing of listless and impotent bulls. In the next patch or gully 27 pups are counted. Two are in a little cave alone with a single cow. Are these twins! It is not evident how the cow and pups could have reached the place. On crossing over to the other side, however, a small hole, just large enough for a seal to crawl through, is found leading down to the shelf below, where the rest of the harem is. One pup lies dead under a slide of sand and rocks; a very young one. There are 30 pups in the next section; 110 in the next; 18 in the next. Then there is a break; 23 pups follow; then 57, one dead in the sand. In the next section 112 are counted; then 79; one young one is trampled in the dust. The sections counted extend to the first little point and break north of Polovina Point. There are over 900 pups, but the count is by no means complete. On the 15th of July Mr. Townsend counted the cows in these sections and found 1,268 in 86 harems. Evidently we have not found all the pups.1 At the southern end of the cliffs is a wet cow, just in from the sea, with bloody shot holes in her back below the shoulders, the shot apparently having passed through. The cow had just come out of the water, and the fresh blood is streaming down her back. Another cow in the same harem showed a fresh wound on her back, probably the result of a bite; it might be the wound of a spear. The cow with the two holes was undoubtedly shot,2 the buckshot penetrating the skin at one side and coming out at the other. 1 When the count of live pups was made on this section, by actually driving up and counting the animals, 2,496 were found. 2 Others which had been shot at the same time were found at Morjovi, July 25. 330 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PHIBILOF ISLANDS. POLOVINA ROOKERIES. The Polovina rookeries show some decrease from the conditions of last year. The decrease in hauling-ground area is more marked. The space at present occupied is but a fraction of the former area. It is almost impossible to count the harems on the main part of Polovina, but Colonel Murray reports finding 138 harems on the 15th, and, so far as we can judge to-day, this is about right, though at this time the harems are beginning to be demoralized. The maximum extension of the breeding area on this rookery is still pretty well defined by the position of the idle bulls. Of these there are nearly enough to till the old grounds, but the scarcity of females leaves two-fifths of them without harems. This thinning out of cows indicates a falling off' much greater than the mere reduction of rookery space on the map can exhibit, because not only is less space occupied, but this less space is more thinly occupied. The rookeries are fullest about July 15. Then each harem has its characteristic form and position. When cows are many and the grounds level, various harems run together in a mass. Each bull at first tries to control his own cows and round them up; but later on this can not be done, and finally two or three bulls rest on the edge of the mass, holding the cows in common. After a while the wandering of the pup attracts the mother away from the harem. Impregnated cows have no further interest in the bull and follow the pups or go into the water, and the harems grow vague in their lines of demarkation. This is more or less true by July 18, when one-fourth, perhaps one-third, of the cows only are ever present. The attractiveness of the bulls cuts no figure in building up harems. The bull does no courting, nor does he make any effort to please the cows. The position he holds is, in the first place, the reward of his force and pugnacity; but the size of the harem is determined by the advantage of the position and with reference to the place of landing of the cows. He can not leave this position to secure cows, without being supplanted. He must wait for them to come to him. All bulls seem to be alike to the cows, but the cows like certain places, and the more so if their pups are there. When the pups are podded, the cows scatter about and the rookery spreads. As a rookery declines, the masses break up into individual harems, rounded up by the bulls, and the breaks between the harems become larger. This makes a count by space occupied a thing very untrustworthy. On rocky ground, among lava blocks and gullies, the scattered arrangement is universal, and probably has always been so, as no massed arrangement is possible under the rough cliffs of St. Paul. On Polovina cliffs and Kitovi little harems may be seen stowed away in all sorts of queer corners. DEAD PUPS.1 On the way home three dead pups, not in a condition to be examined, were found on the beach approaching Lukanin Rookery, but a very long way distant from the harems. These pups could hardly have wandered there, and were probably dead pups washed over from Lukanin by the high surf, as they seem to have been dead for some time. They do not appear emaciated. »This whole subject of the death of pups must be reviewed in the light of the fuller investiga- tions of 1897. CAUSES OF DEATH AMONG PUPS. 331 All effort will be made to make a more definite study of the causes of death among pups. Several causes seem to be apparent on the surface. A certain number of pups are found at a long distance back of the harems. They do not show any marks of violence, and lie prone upon the sand as though they had lain down exhausted and died. Their emaciated condition points to starvation. Tbey have wandered off and become lost. One pup on Poloviua was found one-fourth of a mile away from the rookery, evidently starved. Another was seen on the hauling ground, weak and plainly starving. The number that thus stray is, however, not large. Another cause of death, is the trampling of fighting bulls. The crushed appearance of some of the little fellows and the position in which they lie point to this as the cause. It is not an easy thing to kill a pup, for of the hundreds seen to be run over and stepped upon by the bulls in their lunges about through the harems, no pup has yet been seen to be killed or even seriously wounded. A pup physically weak, injured in some way, or taken in some peculiar position might, however, be easily crushed. After the sandy beaches, the next most important place to find dead pups is along the line of the outer harems. This is the ground which is fought over by the harem bulls and the idle ones attempting to steal cows. The case of the dying pup with the crushed head and the pus oozing out seems to indicate a bite by a bull or cow as the cause of death in a limited number of cases. The pups as a whole are a very lively, healthy, and vigorous lot of little animals. They climb over the rocks, play with each other in their fashion, and are not at all delicately constituted. No weaklings are to be seen among them. Their instincts seem to lead them to work up the slopes and away from, the water, so that drowning must be an exceptional cause of mortality. Killable seals do not lie close to or behind the rookeries. Therefore it is not true that in making the drives the breeding seals are disturbed. Behind most of the rookeries are from two to four series of idle bulls, 20 or 30 feet apart, quarrelsome? immovable, and dangerous. Outside of these there are usually as many series of half bulls who will drive a little but stand their ground more or less. Along the water's edge there is a similar arrangement, but the idle bulls and the wet bulls are closer together. Tolstoi, Zapadni, Reef, and Polovina, as well as other rookeries lying on slopes or with parade grounds behind, are fringed with these idle bulls, which some early writers took for sentinels. These often perch on huge rocks or sleep in clefts or volcanic craters, wherever they find a suitable place, but they are in no sense sentinels. They merely spend their time in sleeping and watching the rookery life below, in which they would like to take a part but dare not. THE CENSUS OF THE ROOKERIES. The estimate of harems made to-day on Poloviua rookeries gives us the data with which to complete our census of the breeding herd for the present season for St. Paul. On all the rookeries the harems have been counted except Vostochni and Morjovi. These have been in part counted and in part estimated. For Tolstoi and Polovina Cliffs, Kitovi, Lagoon, Little Zapadni, Zapadui Reef, and Ardiguen cows as well as harems have been counted. As all the breeding grounds on which cows have been 15184, PT 2 6 332 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. counted are of the scattered bowlder beach sort, it has seemed that the average harem of Kitovi rookery, which is the largest consecutive breeding ground counted, is most nearly typical of the rookeries as a whole, and for those on which only harems have been counted this average is used in estimating the population of cows. This census is tentative and approximate only, but it seems to n't the conditions of the period known as the height of the season. Estimate of cows for St. Paul Island. Rookery. Date. Basis. Harems*. Cows. Kitovi July 13 182 3 153 July 20 147 2 543 July 13 120 1 474 July 14 Conut of harems 389 6 729 Tolstoi (cliffs) do 108 1 498 do ... Count of harems 583 10, 085 do .. 210 2 400 do . . do 176 2 256 July 16 302 5 224 July 13 Couot of both 27 550 Reef July 16 Count of harems 504 8.719 Si vutch ' Rock . do . .. do 27 467 July 23 do 138 2 387 Polovina (cliffs) 86 1,268 July 23 45 779 Northeast Point (west side) July 16 224 2,887 Do 751 12, 992 Northeast Point (east side) July J6 Count of both 112 1, 194 Do Estimated 181 3, 134 Total ... 4 312 69 738 Mr. 1 Altered to 67 harems and 1,090 cows by count and inspection of August 12 JULY 24. Dr. Jordon and Mr. Macoun went to Northeast Point in the buckboard. Mr. Lucas visited Gorbatch in the morning and Kitovi in the afternoon. Clark visited Ardiguen. Weather foggy, with glimpses of the sun at intervals; westerly breezes. Ther- mometer 44, barometer 30.54. ARDIGUEN. Harem A has still his 4 cows under the bank. Harem X has none, and maintains A's old position. Y, who had 6 cows at the last enumeration, has none to-day, but lies beside his rock with 2 pups. B has only 4 cows; C, 19. D has apparently 32, but part of them may belong to E, who seems to have been thrown out of his position and lies behind D. F has 15 cows. The number of pups still remains undiminished, but they are lower down the slide. A pod of 25 are down on the rocks so close to the water that the spray is breaking over them this afternoon. They were evidently there to meet the cows returning from the water. It is significant that the cow first noted with the greenish tinge on the neck is present again to-day, having been present on July 11), but absent on July 20. She has been absent four or five days, doubtless at sea. MR. LUCAS'S NOTES ON GORBATCH. On Gorbatch a small fresh-looking seal, probably a yearling male, wanders about the harems; females snap at him and he moves oil'. There are 7 dead pups on the slope back of the rookery. They have probably strayed and starved. THE NORTHEAST POINT ROOKERIES. 333 Young and idle bulls are lying about everywhere, and are a nuisance, as one must be careful not to tread on them. Bachelors of various sizes lie about at low tide in beds of kelp. The day is alternate sun, fog, and sunshine; the seals sleep soundly, and when the sun conies out fail with their hind flippers. Three idle bulls are having a battle. They bite, wrestle, and push, this last seeming to be the decisive point. If a bull gets pushed he gives up and runs. The seals urinate and defecate on rookeries, and the placenta? decay. No notice is taken of the smell by the seals. Events in harem life are slow, and one may watch for a long time without seeing anything in particular occur. Do the testes of the males lie in the body when the animals are not rutting! Do they retract after copulation, or do they continue down during the season?1 Seals have a poor memory; they start to do one thing, then go off and do some- thing else. A cow starts to seek her pup, stops to scratch and rest; by and by remembers the pup and begins calling and hunting again. A cow comes out of water and goes to rear; calls loudly; a pup comes; they smell each other and the pup proceeds to nurse. This smelling seems to constitute the recognition between mother and pup. Another wet cow drives off various pups which approach, but shows no desire to find her own. On Kitovi, a yearling is seen playing in a pod of pups; he appears to be spending the afternoon with them. The bull takes DO notice of him. One pup has been bitten on the rump and is bloody. A wet female deliberately bites two wet pups and shakes them; makes no effort to find her own. A bachelor blunders into the rookery and is expelled with great vigor; the last bull into whose clutches he falls is so excited that he loses his balance and falls 10 or 15 feet from the cliff into the sea. A female comes out of the water calling and hunts about; a pup goes to meet her, but before it catches up the cow goes to another part of the rookery, sits down, and dries herself. After half an hour she calls again; the pup conies bleating; they smell each other and he proves acceptable and nurses. The pup in hunting is stupid. It climbs over large stones instead of going around them. Other females snap at it as it goes along. DR. JORDAN'S NOTES. On the way to Northeast Point I took, for museum purposes, the skin of a yearling bachelor accidentally killed in the recent drive at Poloviua. A pod of 20 yearlings were seen in pond at the killing ground, where they took refuge after the drive on the 23d and have remained since. VOSTOCHNI ROOKERY. Hutchinson Hill, at Northeast Point, looking north, compared with Mr. Macoun's photograph of July 22, 1892, shows an evident falling off'. The general line of massing in that year went back two or three yards farther southeast and was less broken into individual harems. Six small harems are now above the mass. Then there were 5 1 See later observations iu October, showing that they are under control of the animal and are withdrawn at will into the body. 334 THE FUR SEALS' OP THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. large and 4 small ones. The rookery does not now go more than two-lifths of the distance from the shore to Townsend's cross of last year. Distant patches also seem smaller and do not extend up to the bank. Twenty bulls are now visible in one part of the mass where 30 were shown in 1892. There were 23 idle bulls in sight in 1892, where there are now some 30; but this is not worth much. The chief change is in the thinness and narrowness of the entire mass. In another view from a photograph of 1892 a line from point to point would cut off 40 harems and GOO seals from the mass. At the present time the mass falls 40 feet short of this line, and only 5 small isolated harems on the rocks above would be cut off. Along the seashore no great change is evident, but from the sand all harems are gone. One-third of the whole great mass west of the foot of Hutchinson Hill is gone. Looking north there is less change visible. Nine bulls are to-day about equidistant in a straight line running obliquely across the sands from' the foot of Hutchinson Hill toward the east, but all are idle except 2. In the photograph of 1892 there is shown a similar line of bulls in the sandy tract, all occupied and in the very midst of the rookery, 10 to 20 feet west of its outer edge. About 200 harems are west of Hutchinson Hill; 200 more in the large patches south of it. All the rookery masses are everywhere 30 to 50 feet short of Townsend's crosses. One old bull, far above the others on the slope of Hutchinson Hill, had two cows which were stampeded. One got away to the harem below. The bull followed the second one down the hill, seized her, and finally succeeded in getting her back. Meanwhile he roared and fairly wept, his voice telling as plainly as could be his feelings. Another bull attacked him and the rescued cow ran away to join the other in the large harem below, leaving the old fellow alone and swearing. He climbs back to his rock disconsolate. When a bull chases another bull, or a man, he goes only about 10 feet and then looks back instinctively to see what has become of his cows. Then the object of pursuit can get away. There is an enormous mass of seals under Hutchinson Hill, the largest on the island. Vostochui is a noble rookery, though far short of its former greatness. A WOCNDED HULL. One 5-year old bull, blind of one eye and hurt in the other, is ordered killed. Before he can be secured 3 other bulls attack him and nearly kill him. Nowhere has been seen such a ferocious lot of idle bulls, some of them old and brown. Fierce quarrels are in progress all along the rookery line. The blind bull is probably G years old instead of 5. He is a noble fellow, but badly used and getting thin. His left eye is nearly gone on account of a cataract-like thickening. Eight eye entirely gone. On closer examination the eyes are found to have been destroyed by buckshot. We find more buckshot under the skin. The skin is taken for museum purposes. The coarse gray wigs have little of sealskin beauty, but the brown and black ones are handsome. There is great commotion on the rookery when we move about, but no attention is paid to the shooting of the bull, and when we are quiet all the idle bulls settle down to watch us and fan themselves in the sunshine. THE EFFECTS OF DISTURBANCE. 335 The autopsies of seals of all ages and grades show splendid visceral health. The only wounds are on the head, breast, and especially at the edge of the fore flipper. In the latter place all old bulls show scars. When the seals fight they aim to strike low at the angle of the fore flipper, as if knowing it to be a weak spot. THE EFFECT OF DISTURBANCE. One of the bulls that tried to kill the one we shot now lolls quietly 30 feet away, while the skinning is going on. He looks on with sleepy interest, no longer afraid, as we are not moving, nor angry, as we do not invade his grounds. He soon goes to sleep beside us. If we killed a hundred bulls and skinned them on the spot the others would not pay any attention. It is only our movements they fear. They have a nervous dread of quick movements, whether of other bulls or of men. The old bulls are made angry, the young ones afraid. The bachelors on hauling ground, in the rear of the rookeries, when alarmed rush to the rookeries, as they did when pups. This causes many of them to get cut and roughly handled, for the old bulls soon show them they are not wanted. The bull is much quicker to detect the nature of the intruder than the cow, which fears man chiefly when he is moving. A bachelor seal can often be surprised when asleep, and the surprise is sometimes mutual, as a big fellow starts up unexpectedly from behind a rock and dashes away in great haste. If it is an old bull that is surprised he will plunge at you, but before he has gone 10 feet he will turn about to see what his cows are doing. Then you can get away, for after he has once looked back he goes no farther. He will turn from an intruder to intercept the flight of his cows. This he does by snorting, growling, blowing out his musky breath, by seizing the cow and bending her neck backward to the ground, or by seizing her by the back and tossing her over his head. The cows are afraid to leave when the bull exhorts in this way, and during the period when the harems are well defined the cows are more afraid of the bull than of any intruder; but after July 20, when the cows have become impregnated, their fear of the bull passes away and the older ones do as they please, running away when frightened. Later on the young cows also become more independent. When a cow wants to go and the bull interposes she bites him in the neck. For the most part he takes it patiently enough, though sometimes the fur comes away with the cow's sharp teeth. THE SEA-LION ROOKERIES. North of Hutchinson Hill is a mighty hauling ground, with thousands of bachelors still on it. Once across the whole end of the island was an immense parade ground. A huge sea lion is seen asleep on the rocks with a drove of bachelors about him. From the hauling ground and leading to the water is a great neutral belt of beach line, similar to that occupied by harems, but left open to the passing bachelors. About 20 sea-lion pups are lying on a rocky shelf close to the sea, where the surf breaks over them. About 10 dead ones are cast up on the beach. Adult sea lions are more shy and the pups more defenseless than seal pups. Bulls as well as cows take to the water when disturbed and stay there bellowing, the cow much like that of a bull seal, but the tone is flatter, and the pups with very heavy flat voices. The sea-lion pups soon grow calm. There is considerable variation in their size. Two or three of the largest ones are twice as bis: as the smaller ones. 336 THE FUR SEALS OP THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. Thirty other sea-lion pups are seen on another rocky shelf. They are very heavily built and have long noses. One has several bad cuts. They swim rather clumsily yet. The sea-lion cows lie out in the surf and bellow and groan. They are usually together in groups of three or four. The sea-lion rookery of the west side was also visited. A bull and 9 cows plunge into the water on sight of us. They swim about bellowing with fear. The pups, as large as yearling seals, remain on the rocks and bleat. Their color is a rich brown ; that of the adults a rich creamy white. The pups are shiny, with rolls of fat under the skin, and lie huddled on the rocks where the spray breaks. One element at least in the extinction of the great Sivutch (Eumetopias stelleri) is the superfluity of bulls, that fight with tremendous force. Behind the two sea-lion rookeries were some 12 dead pups, nearly as large as yearling seals, high on the rocks. Jacob Kochuten says that they were killed by fighting bulls, which must be the case.1 Three of them were crushed under great stones weighing 50 to 100 pounds each, " kicked up by bulls," according to Jacob. Certainly they were not thrown on them by the surf. Two or three others had bled pools of blood from their noses, which points to crushing rather than drowning as a cause of death.2 One Sivutch pup recently dead seems emaciated, as though it had starved to death. Its skin is saved for museum purposes. MORJOVI ROOKERY. Up to a certain point in polygamy, the less bulls the more pups. The wise breeder would not turn a herd of 100 fighting bulls into a herd of 100 cows. I go to the windward side of 500 sleeping bachelors and not far away. So long as I go quietly they pay no attention. I do not believe much in the acuteness of their sense of smell. If a man does not move, they care no more for him than for a sea lion. I sit down on a log within two rods of the harems and the cows pay no attention to me. The bull was much disturbed by my approach, but lies down and pants. The half bulls and idle bulls pant loudly on the drives, but the bulls always pant, even while going about their domestic duties. Three water bulls come up behind me out of curiosity. These water bulls are very inquisitive. But no one is alarmed while I remain quiet, though on the wind- ward side. It is the rushing of the half bulls into the harems that causes most of the commotion. The old bulls promptly collar them and throw them out. One stray pup among the bachelors is cut in the rump, as though bitten. He is growing poor, but is sturdy and quarrelsome and wants no nonsense. I have to leave him to starve. A dead seal pup lies beside two dead sea-lion pups, far from any rookery. Probably tossed up by the surf after death. Seven more dead pups are ou the sand beach further on, with 2 more sea-lion pups and a half bull. All have probably been washed in by the surf from the neighboring- harems. Three small dead pups were seen on the slope of Hutchinson Hill. One lay among the bachelors not emaciated. One dead pup was seen at the edge of the harems to the north of the Hill. 1 It remains yet to be determined whether these dead pups were not killed by the worm, Uncinaria. This sea-lion rookery occupies a sandy area in part. The pups here were too long dead in 1897 to determine the cause of death. 4 Bleeding at the nose may be caused by Uncinaria. SEA LIONS AND BLUE FOXES. 337 SEA I.IOX NECK. Sea Lion Neck is a rocky reef with a few hareins on either side. At its tip are 3 huge sea-lion bulls. Five sea-lion cows are swimming in the water. One bull goes jn and one sits on a rock and looks at me. The third sleeps behind. One female lands. Several pups are on the rocks and in the surf. The female sea lion seems larger than the bull seal, but she is slimmer. The bull is immense, as large as a horse. The females come near the shore to see the pups. These huge cream white beasts are very interesting. Eight more dead sea-lion pups are seen. There seems to be a very great waste among them. The pups are far from the sea on the back of the reef. All are rotting. One or two are emaciated; the rest not. Two or three are in the surf below the high tide. I do not see more than 20 live pups on the rookery. Ten more are near the rookery itself; with them are 1 male and 2 female sea lions. The mother sea lions seem alarmed, but ineffective. The living pups are now on the rocks close to the water; some are in the water. But all of the dead ones lie on a tract of ground discolored by excrement, evidently the original rookery. Four emaciated male pups are skinned and saved as specimens. Evidently, from the waste of its pups, the Sivutch is not long for this earth. The sandy beach below Walrus Bight is strewn with bones of whale, walrus, and sea lions, seals and mighty animals. It makes one sick to see this evidence of waste of splendid marine life. Why not let the walrus and sea lions alone? We shall never see their like again. THE BLUE FOX. A little blue fox comes within a rod of me and circles about me as I stand still. He is a jolly little knave. He goes twice around, each time a little nearer, the third time coming near enough to snap several times at my shoe. I sit so as to prevent him from grabbing my leg, which he would prefer, but dares not touch. He circles around several times more, then lies down behind me, biting again at my shoe, which he finds hard. When I move away and sit down he circles around again, and seemed pained and disappointed when I finally leave. No other animal has such a cold, calculating, selfish eye as the fox. North of Sea Lion: Neck is a densely crowded mass of seals on a low slope strewn with very large bowlders. It is full of quarreling bulls and surrounded by several lines of idle bulls. It is a fine rookery which has evidently seen better days. It is very hard to inspect, except around the edges. There are no cliffs, and an easy descent leads to the reef of huge bowlders which constitutes the seashore. There is a noble hauling ground around it. The ground is black with pups and mossy with bull wigs above the brown cows. Five hundred square feet close by has 50 seals in all; 12 cows, 2 bulls, and 42 pups — 9 feet each; but this is closer than the average. This great patch is thicker behind and on the edges than on the middle. THE SEA LIOXS. South of Sea Lion Neck 2 dead pups are seen in the sand among bachelors. Three have been washed up on the beach, with 5 dead sea-lion pups. These are some 338 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. of the lot from which Professor Thompson took skulls. One is fresh enough to skin. One dead female fur seal with unborn pup has been washed up with them. On examination she is found to have been shot through the back. Six young sea lions, 1 yearling male seal, and 4 seal pups have been washed up at the south end of the beach. Nine more dead sea-lion pups are counted; 2 or 3 have starved to death, the rest drowned. The starved pups can be distinguished by the absence of fat. They are the only ones not too rotten to examine. There are 5 more dead pups by this sea-lion rookery, big enough now to swim well. The sea-lion pups learn to swim in the great rollers. About 20 young ones are bleating "b-a-a-a," not "b-a-a-a" like the seals. Finally the whole rookery stampedes to the sea. The male sea lion is four times the size of the female. His girth about the shoulders is enormous. He has a face like that of a St. Bernard dog. He seems more gentle but less quick than the bull seal and has vastly greater strength. A stampede of sea lions is worse than one of seals, but they do not get away so quickly. The whole herd, large and small, is now in the sea together, roaring, leaping dolphin-fashion, quite like the seals, the young not so well. They open the mouth very wide when bellowing. Their mouths larger than those of seals; jaws and teeth stronger. The natives save the large intestines of the sea lion to make water- tight uppers for their shoes. The sea lions go south in the winter. Their pups are born earlier than the seal pups, in the latter part of May. Natives say that the sea lions fight much worse than bull seals. Ten to 20 cows each is the size of the harems, and they have the same general habits as the fur seals. In their tights they cut gashes in each other a foot long. The sea-lion bulls are said to go away after the middle of July. They have not gone yet. THE SHOT SEAL. A fresh cow floated in to-day on the beach below Sea Lion Neck and was skinned by the guard. She had been lately killed by buckshot, there being bloody shot holes in the neck. Evidently pirates are already abroad. The carcass was examined and the cow found to be lean and in milk, but not much milk evident. She seemed to be an old cow, from what I could tell by the ovaries, which were somewhat injured by the rude dissection of the skinner. I find shot holes through the oesophagus, in one side and out the other; also a shot hole through the glottis and one in the pericardium. The heart was full of clotted blood. The stomach was empty. The flesh was perfectly fresh, not more than a day or so dead. The cow died near the shore and was washed up on the beach. She was perhaps shot at some distance away and became worn out by long swimming. The skin was salted and taken in evidence of poaching in July from some quarter. JULY 25. Mr. Clark, Mr. Lucas, and Professor Thompson witnessed the killing on the vil- lage grounds. Dr. Jordan returned from Northeast Point. Mr. Macoun photographed Kitovi and Lukanin rookeries. In the afternoon Mr. Lucas and Professor Thompson visited Tolstoi. Weather was foggy in the forenoon with occasional glimpses of the sun; westerly winds; thermometer 44 ; barometer 30.62. ON THE TILLAGE KILLING GROUND. 339 MR. CLARK'S NOTES. The drive this morning was from Zoltoi Sands, the Reef, Kitovi, and Lukanin. The seals from Zoltoi -Sands were already sufficiently rested by 4 o'clock, so that killing; began at that time. Upwards of 500 were killed at the edge of the ground on which the former killings took place. The rejected ones went back to the sea on the east side. In the first pod turned oft' was a cow, the mate of the one shot on Zoltoi Sands a day or two ago. She is said to be the first female seen in a drive the present season. She caused the clubbers considerable trouble, being very fierce and unmanageable. At 7 o'clock work was suspended for breakfast and the various pods of the seals were driven into the lake to cool off and then rounded up on the shore to rest. After breakfast the scene of the killing was changed to a point nearer the lake to shorten the distance, the weather having turned out warm. The escaping pods were now allowed to return to the sea at the village angle of Zoltoi Sands. Later on another shift was made to the shore of the lake. Some of the pods went off to Zoltoi, but most of them swam the length of the lake and crossing the neck entered the sea at the cove in front of the lagoon. Some of the yearlings, of which there was an unusual number, were examined to ascertain whether or not the yearling females herded with the yearling males, but all were found to be males. Two seals were found with shot; one contained ordinary buckshot and the other two irregular slugs each as large as two grains of buckshot. Agent Crowley turned over 13 buckshot which had been taken from the seals at the Northeast Point killing on the 21st instant. The seals seemed more irritable and fierce this morning than at the former killings. The percentage of little fellows was very much greater, and these, while showing all the fierceness of the older ones, had less appreciation of necessity of getting away, and were therefore harder to manage. One little fellow seemed determined not to be driven off. He remained through the killing of two pods and fought all the time. He then ran back to the herd and was brought up a third time with just as much fight in him as ever. Finally he forgot himself long enough to get out of range. Frequently these yearlings would return several rods, leaving the escaping pod and taking up their places among the dead. They are quite as difficult to handle as the half bulls. One little fellow seemed bound to remain on the killing ground, and when one of the clubbers took him by a hind flipper and threw him several yards into the row of dead carcasses he immediately started back, but in the meantime part of the pod had been worked off and he turned back and went off' with the escaping ones. One yearling received a blow on the nose while the killing was going on at the lake shore. After a good deal of hesitation he entered the water, but came swimming back to the point from which he started as though dazed. His nose was bleeding audit was thought it might be necessary to kill him. But when it was finally decided to do so he turned sharply about and swam off to join his companions as if nothing had happened. A half bull was stunned by a blow on the nose and lay apparently dead for a few minutes, then recovered and seemed willing to fight it out. He was with difficulty 340 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. forced into the water, his nose bleeding profusely. The seal's nose in his weak spot. A slight blow there produces great discomfiture for the time being. Numerous escaping seals showed bloody marks, but it was blood from the noses of their dead companions. Several were seen to be struck accidentally with the clubs. But the number did not exceed a dozen in a killing of over 1,600, and aside from those instances noted none of the injuries were serious. A seal too old to kill was seen in one of the escaping batches having a blind eye, evidently one of the "moon-eyes" referred to by Elliott. His blindness did not impair his ability to fight, and the fact that he could not see on one side of his head enabled him to very effectively stampede the clubbers. The drive from Lukanin showed a marked excess of yearlings. In the earlier drives these yearlings do not appear, and in the later drives Lukanin sends in an overwhelming majority of them. The following is a tally of a number of typical pods ol escaping seals, distinguishing between large and small. The large ones were half bulls over 4 years of age; the small ones were mostly yearlings with some 2-year-olds. A number of pods from Zoltoi ran as follows: Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. 18 2 9 1 13 2 9 1 9 1 17 0 15 3 18 0 10 I 1ft 1 15 2 18 0 15 0 12 0 10 1 20 0 21 0 14 0 9 0 18 6 26 2 A number from the Lukanin, as follows: 1 Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. 18 15 5 2 8 9 5 20 5 25 8 5 3 15 i 11 5 7 12 6 28 9 30 12 12 7 12 10 9 9 19 Beyond this point it could not be clearly distinguished from what point the particular pods were drawn, as they had all been turned into the lake to cool and had become mixed. But it is safe to say that when the pods got to running again, as below, they were from Lukanin : Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. Big. Little. 3 36 2 32 7 20 3 33 0 59 8 20 7 33 4 16 11 19 6 35 10 16 7 7 1 17 7 22 3 23 6 18 11 9 5 20 0 30 4 23 22 11 7 10 1 23 4 21 2 23 2 23 2 31 7 21 1 27 3 23 0 15 These specimen pods will be sufficient to show the general proportion of those rejected on the killing grounds. There were rejected 1,008 big and 1,177 little seals; 1,030 all told were killed. The total drive therefore numbered 3,815 animals. These were driven up without the loss of a single one, as an examination of the driveway showed. THE NORTHEAST POINT ROOKERIES. 341 DR. JORDAN'S NOTES; NORTHEAST POINT. Another cow was washed OD shore this morning near Sea Lion Neck. This one had been dead somewhat longer than the preceding. She was very fat and had a large unborn pup. A number of buckshot holes in the back and sides show the cause of death. This skin was salted and retained in evidence of poaching. A little pod of yearlings swam about together all day in Webster Lake. They slept on its banks at night. These young males seem to enjoy life greatly. To the carcasses of the thousands of their kind on the banks of the lake they pay no attention. Three cormorants and 7 little auks, each with a quill over his ear, its root near the glassy unintelligent eye, sat silently together on the rocks and let me approach them within 15 feet, when all but 2 of the cormorants flew away. I left these in peace, having no grudge against them. Coming home I watched a pod of yearlings turn from the drive into the village cove; they go slowly until in deep water, then string out in long procession, dolphin-like, They are from Zoltoi Reef and Lukanin, but all turn to the left around Spilki and pay no attention to the neighboring Lagoon rookery. They are out of sight in about four minutes, the distance being about half a mile. THE DIFFICULTY OF MAKING A CENSUS. It is evidently impossible to make an accurate census of the seals on St. Paul Island, because, on the great rookeries, as the Reef, Gorbatch, Tolstoi, and Zapadni, one can neither estimate nor count the cows. Nor can one do it at Polovina, because there is no point of view where the whole rookery is visible. Even the bulls can be only roughly estimated. On Northeast Point there are long strips which can not well be seen from the land, and the surf and the great distance from St. Paul village preclude a survey from the sea. Besides, the two great masses, one on the slope of Hutchinson Hill ( Vostochni) and the other on Walrus Bight (Morjovi), are so situated that even the bulls can only be counted approximately. At the time of our first enumeration on Kitovi, Tolstoi, and the Lagoon, the rook- eries were at their height, with more cows present than at any time since. But all were not in and no yearlings nor 2-years olds had appeared. Nor am I sure that any have appeared since, unless yearling cows are among the bachelors. 1 have never seen one, and am not sure that I have seen a 2-year-old. True's estimate was honestly and carefully made, but I believe it to be too low for the year. The rookeries in question were less dense than the average, with smaller harems, and more cows were absent than he thought. Besides, by enumerating them as present when they were not, he omitted the virgin cows. No count gets quite all the cows, not even on Tolstoi Bluffs, the most accessible. True's estimate has the value that he assigns to it; no more. There are not and never have been millions of cows, nor are they so reduced as to be measured by a few thousands. There may be 75,000 to 100,000.' Adding the still absent virgins there may be 120,000, but it is doubtful. 'This was on the supposition that at the time the cows were counted practically all were present. 342 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. As to the bachelors, such as were killable have been killed and counted, 30,000 in all. There are some 5,000 bulls in active service, half as many idle bulls 6 years old or more, and some 15,000, more or less, of half bulls, wigging 4-year-olds, and wigged 5-year-olds. Of these there are many specimens of splendid sealhood, robust and strong, besides a number of lean and poor ones, hurt somehow — cut by bulls, or with buckshot concealed in their bodies. Then there are yearlings and 2-year-olds, 30,000 or more altogether; no one can guess how many, as they come and go at will. As to the pups, there is one for each female thus far present on the rookeries. If exceptions exist, they will pass away in a few days, for there are no barren cows. Perhaps the bachelors on Northeast Point do not roam back to the southern rookeries. If not, one can roughly estimate the proportion of cows on this great rookery by the known number of bachelors taken there. But this could not be absolute. About Kitovi and Lagoon few old bachelors stay. Tolstoi has very many and Lukanin more than its proportion compared with Kitovi. No drives are made from the Lagoon at all. It is almost exclusively a residence region. JULY 27. Heavy wind and rain all day yesterday made it impossible to get upon the rookeries. Mr. Lucas and Professor Thompson attended the killing at Tolstoi this morning. Dr. Jordan visited Gorbatch rookery in the forenoon, and in company with Mr. Clark and Mr. Lucas went to Lukanin and Kitovi in the afternoon. GORBATCH. There is not much going on at Gorbatch rookery to-day. Many seals are in the sea and the water front is deserted. Pods of pups are paddling in sheltered pools of water out of reach of the surf. This is the first time the pups have been seen by us in the water. Many pups are asleep flat among the rocks. One dead pup, evidently crushed, is seen; it has the placenta attached. A cow lies on the rock and calls her pup from below. She has a peculiar voice and the pup comes for some distance. He can not get up to her and she is too lazy to move. Though close to her she pays no attention to me. She seems to expect her pup to do what is impossible — climb up 10 feet of almost vertical rock. The pup's hair parts in the wet, showing the skin; it feels uncomfortable. The cow finally climbs down. When she gets down the bull makes a fuss. The wet weather makes him cross. He begins teasing another cow, but soon goes to sleep. The cows make their pups come to them. They hardly move an inch in search of them. The pup is allowed to nurse by the sleepy cow and he looks perfectly happy. The white, half-albino 6-year-old bull is on the south end of Gorbatch close above the earlier harems. He has a family now. He is a beauty, evidently just beginning to feel his importance. It is a pleasure to see him on his first entrance into society. May his tribe increase. It braces up his courage amazingly to have 4 cows to look after, and it apparently does not make any difference to him that all the pups under his charge are black. Old bulls rarely touch the little bachelors that are not wigged, but are very savage with the wigged ones. On the steep wet incline at the western end of Gorbatch the animals slip and slide about. When the bulls fight on the cinder slope they roll down it; even the THE DRIVES. 343 pups slide like the rest. Xo dead ones are to be seen. The pups about here are in lively pods. They are probably all born by this time, though one placenta is noticed which is apparently fresh. Two sea lions are on the point now. Both are apparently bulls and fast asleep. The seals lie close by without paying any attention to them. Sea-lion excrement is abundant and chalky in color, like a mixture of plaster and water; this appearance probably due to the undigested shells of crabs. The hind flipper of the seal often rests on the fore. It has separate toes connected by a membrane. The eye of the seal is one-third the length of muzzle, not far behind the cleft of the mouth. The mustache is twice as long as the muzzle. Ten "harbor" seals (Phoca vitulina) of mottled white, with some young ones of darker color among them, lie on Gorbatch Point. As I look at them they take to the water. Their senses seem much more acute than those of the fur seals, and they drop off' into the water and melt away like snowflakes when one looks at them. THE LENGTH OF THE DRIVES. The drive from Polovina to Stony Point, described by Stejneger and True last year, is the last long drive which has been made. The killings at Poloviiia are now made on the margin of a pond about one fourth of a mile away from the hauling ground; those at Zapadni, near Lake Anton; those at Tolstoi, near Ice House Lake. At the Northeast Point killings are made at two places, one on the east side of Webster Lake, the other on the west side near Cross Hill. Seals from the Eeef, Zoltoi, Kitovi, and Lukaniu are killed on the village ground between Zoltoi and East Landing. The drive from the tip of the Eeef is about a mile long, the longest on St. Paul Island; that from Lukanin three-fourths of a mile; Kitovi less; Zoltoi one-fourth of a mile. The drive from Staraya Artel on St. George is longer, over 2 miles, but it is over level ground, with ponds at intervals in which the animals can cool off. The hardest piece of driveway on St. Paul is that crossing Zoltoi Sands from the Eeef. This is due to the softness of the sands. The rocks offer little difficulty to the movements of the seals, and the grassy stretches, which are easy going for them, make up the greater part of the driveways. Xo drives are made from the scanty hauling grounds of Lagoon rookery, or from Sivutch Eock, or from beyond Zapadui Point. LUKANIN. Two little dead pups were seen on Lukauin, evidently crushed to death. Nine-tenths of the dead pups seen thus far have had the umbilical cord attached. They have been crushed soon after birth. Other instances of death, resulting from wandering among the bachelors and from drowning, have been rare up to date. A single cow is located to day with a bull at the southern end of Kitovi, where the lone and apparently starving pup was picketi up two or three days ago by Mr. Clark. The pup was, at that time, carried to the nearest harem, in hope that it might h'nd its way back to its mother. The mother has apparently found it and brought it back to the original place, for it looks like the same pup. The cow was first seen with her pup on shore alone. They were lying close to the Avater's edge. On the approach of Dr. Jordan the cow fled to the sea. He carried the pup back above reach of the surf. Before she came back the pup was found alone and supposed to be lost. It was carried some rods away to the nearest Kitovi harem. The mother has brought it 344 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PKIBILOF ISLANDS. back, and in the meantime lias been taken in charge by a beacb master.. A pup with sore eyelids, probably caused by the intrusion of sand, was also seen. The harem system is now largely broken up. Pictures of the rookeries taken July 25 and after show nothing of the real extent of the rookeries in the breeding season, as the wandering of pups scatters the cows, and an increasing number of them are in the water, while many new ones have come to form harems around the idle bull. The cows can probably remain away longer now, as the pups become older. This evening the guard reports 4 dead cows on shore of the breeding ground at Zapadni. THE KILLING AT TOLSTOI. Mr. Lucas witnessed a portion of the killing from Tolstoi rookery. In nis estimation it would hardly be practicable to drive up smaller pods to the clubbers. Single seals are more courageous and fight worse than when in groups podded together. Large droves of seals are readily intimidated; uothiug can be done with a single seal of any age when brought to bay. One seal among the killed has the fat of orange color. Natives ascribe this to having fed on salmon. It may be due to having fed on Crustacea. Dr. Voss, the island physician, thinks the coloration is due to biliary trouble or jaundice. Nothing was found in the animal's stomach. Mr. Lucas examined a number of other stomachs at Tolstoi, but found nothing- save thick mucus, in one case nearly a pint. Professor Thompson also opened a number with the same result. And yet excrement is to be seen scattered over the hauling grounds, appears on the drives, arid is found in the large intestines of the seals killed. THE WITHDRAWAL OF THE BULLS. Old bulls are hauling out on Middle Hill and thereabouts. Some of them look pretty thin. They go back from the water and sleep in the sands and among the rocks. Tolstoi Sands seems to be a cemetery for old bulls, as many bones are to be found strewn about. The guard has just brought down from Northeast Point the skins of 2 cows dead from buckshot wounds, noted on the 25th, on Morjovi near Sea Lion Neck. The 2 skins have been preserved as evidence of shooting in Bering Sea before August 1. These 2 skins, together with the wounded cow 011 Polovina, seen on July 23 with apparently 2 shot holes in her back, show pretty conclusively the presence of pelagic sealers even at this date. The wounded cow at Polovina was just out of the water. The two cows1 at Northeast Point were found on the beach on the morning of July 24. ARDIGUEN. Harem B has 5 cows and many pups. Harem C has hauled back on the grass out of the muddy place where he belongs. There are 53 cows with him, evidently part of 1 It may be noted that the schooner Aurora, seized later by the Rush for having shot skins on board, with unsealed guns and ammunition, was in Bering Sea at this time. She was released by the courts, it not being proved that the shot holes in the skins had been made by the crew of the vessel in question. CAUSES OF MORTALITY. 345 them A's. D lies alone below his place with 1 cow. Other cows are scattered along the muddy slide. A is asleep in his later place with 3 cows. E is gone altogether. He was found thrown out of his position on July 21. F is in his place with 8 cows. G is asleep away below ; 9 cows are scattered about where he belongs. X. has no cows and is above A's old place. Y is gone altogether, unless a lone bull on the edge of the clitt'is he. The green-necked cow with her pup is with A. It is not known whether she has been absent since the 20th, when she was last seen. Two wet cows come in slowly and creep up the slide, bleating very loudly, shaking their heads. There is nothing going on at the water front. The few wet bulls are inactive. A cow selects a pup from D and repels 2 others. A large pup comes from above down the wet slide to meet the mother, and they crawl slowly up to D. Other pups look anxiously at each wet cow. JULY 28. Professor Thompson, Mr. Lucas, and Colonel Murray went to St. George on the Corwin to make further investigation of the rookeries there. Mr. Macouu photographed Polovina rookery. Dr. Jordan visited Gorbatch and the Reef. GORBATCH. A wet cow came in from the sea; her pup comes down to the lowest rock to meet her. She sees me and goes right back into the water, leaving her hungry, crying pup at the water's edge. A bull which seems young plunges into the water after the cow, but he is not to be the master of the household. A pup is dead on the rocks above the harem. It has a broken scalp with pus oo/dng out. Perhaps this pup belonged to the cow shot some days ago on Zoltoi Sands while consorting with a half bull. The harem is located only a short distance from this point. The cow which deserted her pup a few minutes ago bleats in the water, and the pup answers, but will not go into the water. I retire and the cow comes in, going high up on the rocks with her pup. When one passes a harem now the brown, rusty cows leave for the water and the bull offers little resistance. It is chiefly the silvery cows that remain. There are more than 50 pups paddling to day near the green striped bowlder that looks like a watermelon. This is the place where pups were noticed in the water yesterday for the first time. NATURAL CAUSES OF MORTALITY. The mortality from natural causes in 1,000 pups probably cannot exceed: ' (a) One killed by cows (overestimated). (/>) One killed or led oft' by foxes (overestimated). (c) Eight from being crushed to death by bulls while very young; this has caused half the deaths so fur. (d) Two from being drowned. 1 We allow the following notes on pup mortality to stand as written. It illustrates the difference between qualitative and quantitative work. No actual count was then possible. A later count showed that 70 to 80 in a thousand have been trampled while young, the other causes being all of trifling importance. (This foot note, made iu 1896, must be again revised and corrected in light of the discovery of the parasitic worm in 1897. ) 00 / UJ LI <&J 346 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. (e) Three from starvation due to straying. (/) Two from being carried off by bachelors. Estimate of 17 in all in 1,000, or 1.7 per cent. One pup has been seen with sore eyes, but this can hardly be considered a cause of mortality. Not more than 1 in 50 die naturally, which is certainly a high estimate up to date. ZOLTOI. The white semi albino half bull which has been seen on Zoltoi and which is out this morning is not the same as the white 6-year-old at Gorbatch; but both are beauties. The Zoltoi bull is a 5-year-old. He is not nearly so white as the other. He is rather yellowish gray over dusky under fur. The 5-year-olds generally seem to be getting lean. They are much larger and less plump than 4-year-olds. They have smaller heads. Five years seems to be the "hobbledehoy" age with them. Four- year-olds look like 3 year olds, except for their incipient bristles. Two wounded 5-year-olds are out on Zoltoi; one with a shoulder out of joint, another with an injured back. Another 4-year old in rather feeble condition is blind in one eye. Buckshot will probably be found to be the cause of injury in many such cases. The drives rarely or never produce such injuries, and injuries from falls are very few. Accidental wounds by the clubs on the killing grounds are also very rare Wounds in fights with other bulls are mainly on the shoulders, breast, and head. Of the injured bulls and half bulls that lie about the sands at Zoltoi and Polavina probably 10 are injured by buckshot to 1 that is seriously hurt by fighting or by falling or by driving. The cuts of the bulls are rarely more than skin deep and seem to heal quickly. Buckshot breaks the bones and tears the viscera. The bull with the injured back is ordered shot for museum purposes. He is about 10 years old. Examination shows a large unhealed hernia before the right hip. Jacob Kochuteu says that he has been bitten. THE WITHDRAWAL OF THE BULLS. The tired old bulls are already beginning to pull out on the beaches, having finally given up hope of getting on the rookeries. They may be seen on Zoltoi Sands and on Lukauin and Polaviua sand beaches. We are told that many of them will die before the season is over. They will go to sleep on the sand and simply not wake up. The sand will drift over them as they lie.1 In the afternoon Dr. Jordan visited the salt house and saw the process of curing the skins. The skins are first taken to the salt house and spread out in tiers one above another with salt shoveled over them. After about five or six days they are taken out and examined for places where the salt did not take effect. They are resalted, the order of the skins being reversed. After ten or twelve days they are again taken out 1 It is evident that these bulls were those which had done duty on the rookeries and withdrawn at or near the close of the season. They had probably already been to the sea to feed. They were seen in increasing numbers throughout the rest of the season. The idle bulls which temporarily took their places on the breeding grounds also joined them later in the season. These were in no sense animals which had withdrawn to die. They recovered their wonted condition, and were to be seen by the thousand on English Bay, North Shore, and Lukauin beaches until the end of October. NOTES FROM ST. GEORGE ISLAND. 347 aiid tied in bandies of 2 skins each, ready for shipment to San Francisco, where they are repacked in barrels for shipment to London. Mr. Macoun reported to night that pups were seen, by him playing in sheltered pools of water at Polovina rookery to-day. The time of going into the water is probably not dependent upon the age of the pup, except perhaps in the case of the few that act as leaders. When these have tried the water doubtless pups of all ages within sight follow their example. At least the pods seem to contain little fellows as well as big ones. MR. LUCAS'S NOTES FROM ST. GEORGE ISLAND. I made a short visit to North rookery with Professor Thompson. It has spread considerably, the extension backward and uphill being noticeable. Pups in two places are playing in the water. This is in advance of St. Paul.1 One fresh placenta is seen. Are the bulls darker colored here than on St. Paul? The harem that contained 135 cows on July 9 now has only a moderate number. Some distance inland and up the hill is a new harem with a considerable number of cows. A bull in an adjoining harem who had only a few cows at the earlier date has now a full share. There seeni to be several small fresh cows among the others. Are these the virgin cows, or merely undersized!3 JULY 29. Dr. Jordan visited Zoltoi and the Eeef in the morning, and in the afternoon with Mr. Macoun and Mr. Clark went to Tolstoi. The strong southwest gale continues with great surf. The air seems warmer than usual, and it is difficult to see because of the blinding tnist. ZOLTOI. On Zoltoi numerous instances of excrement were noted. The normal excrement of the bachelors is yellow, firm in texture, with no evident composition. One bull, perhaps an old one, voided liquid yellowish excrement. It is ill scented, abundant with many nematode worms 1 to 3 inches long. The worms are preserved in formalin. Some examples of excrement have dark clayey colors, no texture. The surf is breaking very high on the beach of Gorbatch, where the pups were swimming yesterday. None of the pups are in the water to day. The seals seem to be simply putting in their time till the storm is over. ARDIGUEN. The bull in harem A is asleep on the flat rock. There are two cows and a large pod of pups about them, rolling and biting one another in the neck and flippers. B has 13 scattered cows. A "water bull" (Z) has come up and tried to establish 1 See notes for St. Paul of to-day, both by Dr. Jordan and Mr. Macoun. The coincidence is interesting. -See observations on St. Paul, which culminated on August 1 in proving these small cows to be virgin 2-year-olds. 15184, PT 2 7 348 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. himself, having apparently observed the disappearance of K. D is indifferent and half asleep down toward F, with whom he has a wordy discussion. 1) has 8 cows, and they squabble a good deal. A's green-necked cow is down in D.1 The water bull remains for a time in E, where there are 3 cows. D is near him and attempts to drive him out, but both seem very sleepy. Twenty eight cows are with C, who is pretty active. X is behind him with none. Y is well back, with 1 cow. Another bull well behind Y has 1 cow. Y is very fierce. F is active and has 9 cows. E is gone. Two weeks ago Z would have been skinned alive if he dared enter the harems as he does. He tries again to go up to C, who uses strong language. A is pretty lean. C makes a heavy lunge into a pod of pups and stands on the flipper of one, which pulls and pulls and can not get away until the bull moves. REEF. Six little cows in a harem at the rear of Reef rookery stampede. In a short while they come back to the bull in a body. A stray pup is seen among the bachelors in the runway near by. He is very fierce. I carry him back toward the harem. He tries to follow me away. When touched he bites savagely. There is a single old cow in a harem with a young bull on the hauling ground. Perhaps the lost pup is hers. The wedge-shaped patch of seals is now far beyond Townsend's crosses, within 150 feet of the limit shown by Macoun's photograph of 1892. There has been a great spreading backward on the rookery within a few days. Many bulls which at first were idle now have harems. These harems are evidently formed from late-coming cows, mostly young ones. A bull near the hauling ground has a single cow. In these outer harems, which are large, there are few pups, but some of the cows seem old. Perhaps the pups are podded farther back. Still there are many idle bulls, and they are fierce. The household life in the great patches is different from what it is under the cliffs. Very few wet cows are here, and not nearly so many silvery ones. It will be some time yet before these pups learn to swim, they are so far from the sea. The patch north of the dry pond is now about even with the cross. There are hundreds of pups around the stone on which the cross is painted. There is no sign of virgins here. There are as many pups as cows, if not more. The bulls are very quarrelsome. The cows seem wilder here, and there are more single harems along the edge of the bachelors with whom the cows are more mixed up. When the bachelors stampede, however, the cows always fall behind under the influence of the bull. Evidently the cows in the rookeries most visited — Gorbatch, Lukanin, and Kitovi — are less wild than the others. Those along the west side of the parade ground are very wild, because not near the drive and almost never visited. Three starved pups lie on the hauling ground. A stray pup is among the bachelors. The bachelors tend to hug the edge of the rookery, much to the annoyance of the observer. It takes an Aleut or an old bull to keep them off. There is a good deal of fighting going on. There are some splendid 5-year-olds here. There is a big dead bull lying on the ground occupied by the idle bulls. He has been long dead. 1 She was present oil the 19th; absent on the 20th ; present on the 24th and again on the 27th. DEAD PUPS ON TOLSTOI. 349 An old bull snarls at a pup and rolls him over endwise. The pup seems to stand it well enough. It is wonderful how tough they are. Nothing resembling virgins are yet seen except in the harem of 6 cows first mentioned. This bull finally loses all his cows but one. She is broad headed, like a yearling bachelor. One of the neeing cows is taken in charge by another bull. Her owner tries to regain her, but can not. TOLSTOI. Tolstoi rookery was inspected this afternoon for dead pups. This is the rookery upon which the dead pups of 1892 were recorded by Mr. Macoun. The rookery lies in part upon a sandy area of considerable extent back from the water's edge and in part on ledges of rocks under steep cliffs. It was on the sandy part that the great mortality was noted. Above the sandy stretch there are many harems located upon the long rocky slope covered with large bowlders. When the rookery was first visited this year the harems were closely packed along the edge of the water and under the edge of the rocky slope, leaving much of the sand bare. At the point where the mass was thickest a cliff forming a projecting angle of the slope juts into the sandy tract. From this angle to the sand beach was a great wedge-shaped mass around which the bachelors hauled to get in behind. From this mass most of the harems now to be found above have come, though a part of them have come up over the rocky cliff at accessible points. When the rookery was first seen the entire upper space was covered and held by idle bulls. DEAD PUPS. As in 1892, so to day, this rookery shows the largest number of dead pups on St. Paul, and it shows its excess of mortality about this jutting cliff and on the sandy beach at the point where the greatest mass of seals was located.1 This area of sand is now covered black with pups, and scattered over it are a large number of dead pups flattened out or partially covered with sand. With a glass from a position just above the green cliff and near one of Mr. Townsend's crosses 88 dead pups are counted. It is possible that a number are hidden among the masses of living pups, as in many cases they are playing about and over their dead companions. One hundred would probably be a fairer estimate.2 At the angle before spoken of where the seals were thickest, and where a great amount of fighting was going on at the time the rookery was first visited, there are between 20 and 25 dead pups to be seen within a small area. The rest are scattered over the length of the sandy tract. The angle here resembles very much a similar angle at Polovina, where 8 dead pups were counted in 2 harems. When we consider the great mass of pups at this point on Tolstoi, numbering many thousands, as compared with other rookeries, the percentage of dead pups, placing the number at 100, is not 1 See account of the formation of this mass of seals in notes of 1897 for last week in June. The seals massed against this jutting rocky point as the nearest way to reach the slope behind, up which the harems spread. - When these pups were counted later on, the number was found to aggregate 1,495. This shows how it came that from mere casual observations the great mortality of pups was unnoticed or underestimated in earlier years. 350 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. remarkable. Mr. Macoun points out the spot where he to-day counts 2,5 dead pups as the place where the great mass of dead pups, estimated by him at over 4,000, was seen in. 1892. So far as could be made out witli the glass, no other cause of death than that already noted in similar places on other rookeries can be discovered, namely, crushing under foot by fighting bulls. The pups seem small at a distance, but may be partially concealed by the sand. They show a uniformly flattened appearance and are not curled up. They seem to have died about the same time, or to have been dead about the same length of time. Their appearance seems to indicate that they died in the height of the season. In many cases the fur is worn oft' in patches. Mr. Macoun remarks that the mortality is not so great to-day as it was in 1892, but his observations of that year were made somewhat later and under more favorable conditions. In his opinion, not starvation, but some epidemic, was the cause of death in 1892. He agrees that 200 would probably cover the dead pups to day on Tolstoi Sands. MR. LUCAS'S NOTES. On East rookery of St. George, the hauling grounds and breeding grounds are now but a mere fraction of the space formerly occupied. The character of the ground and the vegetation shows that within very recent times — say five or six years — the rookery covered twice the area and the hauling ground ten times the present area. There are some idle bulls about, mostly young, and many bachelors. Old bulls are hauled out on the beach at various points. The hareins are small, the rookeries sparsely populated. Little East and Great East rookeries were once continuous; now they are separated by a considerable space, and East contains 135 harems and Little East 40. One fresh placenta seen at the water's edge. JULY 30. Dr. Jordan and Mr. Clark visited Gorbatch and Reef rookeries in the afternoon. Mr. Macouu visited Lukanin. The day was cloudy and foggy; southwesterly winds. Thermometer 46; barome- ter 30.45. ZOLTOI. An old bull with a broken flipper, which lay in the "hospital" at the angle of Zoltoi Sands, was killed. He was going about on three legs, holding up the injured flipper like a dog would its paw. THE COLORATION OF THE COWS. There does not seem to be much truth in the current idea that the light-colored cows are recent arrivals and the brown ones those which have been out long enough to get sunburned. It seemed plausible enough when we first landed on St. George, but there are more of these silvery ones now on the rookeries than there have been at any time this season. Tlie season is now far enough advanced to make it possible to assert that all the adult breeding cows are on the rookeries or else have gone to sea after having given birth to their pups. It seems almost certain that the lighter GORBATCH AND REEF ROOKERIES. 351 or silvery colors are those of tlie young females. In a liareai of a dozen cows here on Gorbatch about half the number are these light-colored cows, probably 3 year-olds. The pups have all been born some time, and are as big as any seen on the rookeries. Two other cows in this same harem are wet. They are looking for their pups. One cow is uniformly dark in color. The other shows distinctly her light silvery color. There can be no question that these cows, when dry, will one be brown and the other silvery. Again, these light cows have been seen to enter the water and have been watched as they swam about, their white bellies and throats being noticeable as they whirled in the water. In the case of the browii cows, just as soon as they are dipped they show dark all over. GORBATCH. Beyond the harem just referred to on Gorbatch, near Zoltoi, a dead cow was seen under the cliff apparently wedged betweon two stones. With considerable difficulty and after a lively tight with the neighboring bulls the body of the cow was reached. It did not seem likely that she had been crushed. It was, however, with difficulty that she was withdrawn from the crevice, and it may be that the heavy surf of the past few days has shifted the rocks and wedged her in. As she was dragged along the blood oozed out of her nose. Her skin on a superficial examination did not disclose any shot marks, though the bleeding would seem to indicate some internal wound. Between the shoulders on her back was a scar, quite fresh, where the skin had been cut out in a round patch about the size of a silver dollar. There did not seem to be any wound beneath, but as the cow had been dragged some distance -by the skin of the neck the wound might not have shown. She had not been long dead. The body seemed very plump if not swollen, indicating that perhaps it contained an unborn pup. The nipples were moderately swollen and the vagina somewhat dilated. The details of her condition will be given later after dissection. REEF. Five dead pups were counted on the hauling ground of the Reef rookery, or rather in the runway between the masses of harems through which the bachelors pass in going up to the hauling ground. They did not show evidence of starving, and were probably trampled to death by the half bulls and the idle bulls of which the passageway is always full. Their bodies were flattened out. The holostiaki, of which there are a great number on the hauling ground back of the Reef, are very playful, pulling one another around like dogs at play. Their actions resemble those of the pups in the pods about the harems, but they seem more playful and less in earnest than the pups. The pups play as though they were angry. One old bull, a magnificent fellow, is badly injured in the back. He drags his hind flippers in a perfectly helpless manner. He is, however, very strong in his foreparts, and maintains himself against the half bulls and idle bulls that attack him while trying to get out of their reach. Another old fellow with one of his fore flippers badly swollen was seen on the top of the slope of Gorbatch in a pod of bachelors. He carried his flipper in the air as a dog might a sore paw, getting along quite briskly on three flippers. 352 THE FUR SEALS OF THE PRIBILOF ISLANDS. ARD1GUEN. The slide shows continual change. There are 58 cows up on the flat where the harems of B and C were located. Probably 35 of thN number were in B's harem, but they stampede by way of CTs harem, many of them going down over the cliff, but some of them almost immediately returning. On account of the stampede of the cows to the harems below it is difficult to determine the status of harems D, E, F, and