Lonely Neil the Seal now in danger of being loved to death
By Bianca Hall
Neil the Seal – the 700-kilogram viral sensation from Tasmania’s southern coast – is back, and he’s bigger than ever.
But the juvenile southern elephant seal who captivated the world with his antics – chewing on traffic cones, sprawled snoring in the middle of roads and trying to barge into homes and garages – has been placed into witness protection for his own good.
After time in the Southern Ocean hunting and adding bulk to his already formidable frame, Neil lumbered ashore in southern Tasmania at some point in the past week. Southern elephant seals come to shore twice a year to rest, after spending five to six months at sea gorging on squid, krill, molluscs and fish at the edge of sea ice in the Antarctic.
When Neil last settled on Tasmania’s coastline to moult in November and December, he grew so popular with locals that hundreds of people flocked to catch a glimpse of him.
Wildlife biologist Dr Kris Carlyon urged people to leave Neil alone this time, and not to share footage of his location on social media. Authorities are staying tight-lipped about Neil’s current location.
They fear Neil, who will grow to about five metres in length and weigh 3.5 tonnes when he’s fully grown, could become a victim of his own popularity.
“There is a risk of essentially loving Neil to death,” Carlyon said.
“We have seen around the world various examples where these large, charismatic animals, top predators, have hauled out [of the ocean] in places that are pretty unusual, where people don’t tend to see them, and we’ve seen tourists and people seeking [them] out and paying them too close attention.
“That’s come with the inevitable animal welfare risks and safety risks, and in some situations the authorities have had to euthanise those animals to mitigate those risks. That’s absolutely the last thing we want to happen here.”
Neil was born on the Tasman Peninsula in October 2020, a long way from the closest breeding colony of southern elephant seals on Macquarie Island in the sub-Antarctic.
Elephant seals are known to return to the place they were born and weaned every six months to moult fur and to rest, after spending months foraging in the Southern Ocean.
Carlyon said Neil’s mother might have gotten lost when she birthed her pup on the Tasman Peninsula, to which Neil is now “programmed” to regularly return.
Without the socialisation of other seals, Neil had been known to seek out moving objects for interaction, including people, dogs and cars.
“At the moment, he’s the only one, so he’s a lonely little seal,” Carlyon said.
As Tasmania’s only resident southern elephant seal, Neil has grown into a local celebrity, with Instagram and TikTok accounts dedicated to charting his appearances at local homes, disdain for traffic cones and penchant for sleeping on roads.
But this week, the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania urged people not to tag Neil’s location on social media.
Not only is Neil’s size posing an increasing danger to the public, but he’s also needing protection from people and their dogs.
“We’re very aware he’s become a celebrity both here in Tasmania and around the world, but that comes with its own issues to manage, and our own responsibilities to help keep him safe,” Carlyon said.
“The risks to Neil from increased attention from people are quite considerable.”
Last year, Neil turned up at Kingston Beach, south of Hobart. “It got to a point where we actually had to sedate Neil and move him away from all that attention, there were just hundreds of people visiting him [and] disturbing him,” Carlyon said.
“He wasn’t allowed to rest and there were people approaching far too closely, and that comes with its own human safety risks.”
Southern elephant seals have a unique physiology that could make sedation risky, Carlyon said.
“Sedation itself and moving Neil is a big operation that comes with significant risks, and we really risk doing harm to Neil in that process … so that’s a last-resort option.”
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