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Thread: Why Do Monk Seals Get Eels Up Their Noses? Yes, this is a thing.

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    Administrator fuego's Avatar
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    Why Do Monk Seals Get Eels Up Their Noses? Yes, this is a thing.

    Why Do Monk Seals Get Eels Up Their Noses? Yes, this is a thing.-screen-shot-2019-10-31-10-57-36-pm-jpg


    Sometimes you think you're having a bad day, and then you see the above photo of an endangered monk seal (Neomonachus schauinslandi) with an eel stuck in its nose, and you realize you're doing pretty OK.

    The photo was taken by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and according to NOAA's Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program, this happens from time to time. Strangely enough, though NOAA has been monitoring the monk seal population in the northern islands of Hawaii for almost 40 years, this eel-in-the-nose problem has been observed a handful of times, but only since 2016.

    But, why? Well, it's hard to say. Researchers have noted the trend seems to be in juvenile seals, and they've offered a few possible explanations. For starters, monk seals are ocean-bottom foragers — they like to root around for little animals to eat, flipping over rocks and shoving their faces into coral reefs where eels like to hide. When faced with the ferocious maw of a monk seal, an eel might decide in the heat of the moment to rush up the predator's nose to escape danger. Researchers also have suggested the seals may be eating the eels and then regurgitating them — only their lunch come up the wrong pipe. Which sounds ... painful.

    But don't worry! When researchers see a monk seal with an eel dangling from its nostril, they capture the animal and gently remove it, and the seal goes on to live a freewheeling, eel-in-the-nose-free life. The eels, on the other hand, don't make it.

    Monk seals are closely monitored in the Hawaiian islands because there are only around 1,400 individuals left, and researchers estimate about 30 percent of those animals are alive because of conservation efforts. Their numbers are dwindling due to things like hunting, entanglement in ocean trash and human interference with their habitat and food sources.

    NOW THAT'S INTERESTING
    In the Hawaiian language, the name for a monk seal is "Ilio-holo-i-ka-uaua," or "the dog that runs in rough waters."

    Why Do Monk Seals Get Eels Up Their Noses? | HowStuffWorks

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    So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed. John's Avatar
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    I hate it when that happens.

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    Ezekiel 33 (11-01-2019)

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    Administrator fuego's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by John View Post
    I hate it when that happens.
    Aw man. Got me on that one. Never crossed my mind.

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    I aint going swimming ever again!!!

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    Administrator fuego's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FireBrand View Post
    I aint going swimming ever again!!!
    You've heard about those very little eels or parasite or something that swim up your...never mind. Better google it.

  7. #6
    Quote Originally Posted by fuego View Post
    You've heard about those very little eels or parasite or something that swim up your...never mind. Better google it.
    Yeah that one Jeremy guy that was in the Amazon Basin or somewhere? You do NOT take a whizz in the water!!

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    fuego (11-01-2019)

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    Senior Member Cardinal TT's Avatar
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    Maybe the seal keeps it there for a snack later on

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