62 NATUEAL HISTORY 0¥ AQUATIC AmMALS. 



from which habit it is also often termed Bay Seal, and, on the Scandinavian coast. Fjord Sea, 

 (Fjordskal), and also Eock Seal (Steen-Kobbe).> 



24. THE HARP SEAL. 



General history and nomenclature. — The Harp Seal, Phoca {PagopMlus) grwnlandica 

 Fabricius, like the Crested Seal, presents characters, at least in the male sex, that readily attract 

 the attention of even the casual observer— the one by its "saddle" or "harp-mark" of black on a 

 light ground, the other by its inflatable hood. Accordingly both were mentioned by various early 

 writers, but notably by Egede, Ellis, and Cranz, and the indications they gave of their existence 

 enter into the technical history of the species, forming as they do the basis of the first systematic 

 names. Erxleben described the species in 1777, under the name Phoca groenlandica, his descrip- 

 tion being founded mainly on information previously made public by Cranz. 



Few Seals vary so much in color with age as the Harp Seal. This was long since mentioned 

 by Cranz, who says : " All Seals vary annually their color till they are full grown, but no sort so 

 much as this [the Attersoah], and the Greenlanders vary its name according to its age. They call 

 the toitasihlau; in this state these are white and wooly, whereas the other sorts are smooth and 

 coloured. In the 1st year 't is called Attaralc, and 't is a cream-colour. In the 2d year Atteitsiah 

 then 'tis gray. In the 3d AglehtoJc, painted. In the 4th MilaMoh, and in the 5th year Attarsoak. 

 Then it wears its half-moon, the signal of maturity." 



Dr. Eink states that at the present day the Greenlanders, as well as the Euroj)eans, divide the 

 "Saddle-backs" into four or five different classes according to their age, but that in familiar 

 language they only distinguish by different names the full-grown animals from the half-grown 

 ones, the latter being called " Bluesides." 



The young, when first born, are called by the Newfoundland sealers ."White-coats"; later, 

 during the first molt, "Eagged-jackets"; when they have attained the black crescentic marks 

 they are termed "Harps," or " Saddlers," and also "Breeding Harps"; the yearlings and two-year- 

 olds arc called "Young Harps" or "Turning- Harps," and also "Bedlimers" (or "Bellamers," also 

 spelled "BedJamers"). The older and some recent writers state that the mature pattern of 

 coloration is not attained till the fifth year, while Jukes, Brown, Carroll, and others state that it is 

 acquired in the third or fourth year. There is also a diversity of statement respecting the sexual 

 differences of color in the adults, some writers af&rming that the sexes are alike, while others state 

 that the female is without the harp-mark, or has the dark markings of the male only faintly indi- 

 cated. Mr. Carroll says : " The reason why they are called Harp Seals, or ' Saddlers,' is, the male 

 Seal, as well as the female, has a dark stripe on each side from the shoulders to the tail, leaving a 

 muddy white stripe down the back. The male Harp Seal is very black about the head as well as 

 under the throat. . . . The female Harp is of a rusty gray about the head and white under 

 the throat." Both Jukes and Eeeks, however, refer to the absence of the harp-mark in the female. 



Geogkaphical distribution. — Although the Harp Seal has a circumpolar distribution, it 



' Seals appear to be iucreasing in numbers in Massachusetts Bay. We observed them frequently near Race Point, 

 Provincetown, in 1879, where they sometimes get into the gill-nets set foi mackerel. At Barnstable they have become 

 very numerous and troublesoii e of late. They are often shot or taken in the weirs at Barnstable and Yarmouth, and 

 are accused of seriously depleting the fisheries in this locality, as well as at Plymouth, where they have been preserved 

 for a number of years. Crossing the entrance to Barnstable Harbor at sunset November 10, 1 counted eight or ten 

 heads above the surface. The number here is estimated at sixty-five or seventy, and there are probably not less than 

 three hundred in the bay. They are resident, disappearing for a time in the spring and returning accompanied by 

 their young, about one-quarter as large as their parents, in April or May. Capt. Gideon Bowley, of Provincetown, 

 tells me that they feed on "sun squalls," or medusae, and that he has seen them "boil 'em up," or vomit them, when 

 caught.— G. Brown Goode. 



