Super weaner
A super weaner is an exceptionally large elephant seal at weaning age. Super weaners may reach their large sizes by stealing milk from nursing female elephant seals or by being adopted by an additional mother elephant seal.
Background
Elephant seals have an abrupt weaning process, in which the weaned juvenile seal does not receive assistance from its parents in finding food. The postweaning period is important for the seals' development, with a high mortality rate.Phenomenon
A super weaner, an elephant seal at weaning age which obtains milk from multiple females, can weigh. A typical elephant seal at the same age weighs between and. While most mother elephant seals will bite weaned elephant seals that attempt to suckle, some will allow it for unknown reasons; some super weaners also obtain the additional milk through theft.Instances
A study carried out on Año Nuevo Island in California between 1972 and 1977 observed the existence of some recently weaned northern elephant seal pups which either stole milk from nursing females or were "adopted by foster mothers." Male pups were more persistent and successful at stealing milk, and the largest weaners were universally male, including exceptionally large weaners which the study defined as "superweaners". These seals were "so large that their corpulence impeded their movements"; observation of two of them showed that their ability to acquire additional milk after being weaned was a major factor in their size. The study additionally found that the large weaner seals reach their large sizes through two distinct strategies: by stealing milk from nursing female elephant seals, or by being adopted by an additional mother elephant seal.A 2014 study published in Proceedings of the [Royal Society|Proceedings of the Royal Society B] explored the benefits of high fat stores in female northern elephant seals, which relate to their buoyancy. Daniel P. Costa, one of the authors, later stated that the findings might explain a known phenomenon in which super weaners are rarely seen again after departing the rookery. Costa suggested that super weaners are likely so buoyant that they have difficulty figuring out how to feed.
A 2021 study, also in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, removed super weaners from modeling analyses because it utilized "the assumption that a single mother nursed a single pup throughout the average lactation period". Super weaners were defined as weaners weighing more than. This study found that both male and female pups can become super weaners, although they are more likely to be male.