糖心视频 developing retirement plan for Ocean Sciences Centre seals
糖心视频 University is developing a retirement plan for the Ocean Sciences Centre seals, with the best interest of the animals in mind.

have been a fixture of the Ocean Sciences Centre (OSC) since 1989, when (1988鈥2021), a one-year-old female harp seal, was captured with her pup in the Magdalen Islands.
She was joined by Tyler, a male harp seal, captured as a white coat in 1990.
Babette鈥檚 offspring, all raised at the OSC, include Jamie&苍产蝉辫;(1994鈥2013),&苍产蝉辫;Millennium 鈥淟enny鈥 (2000鈥14) and Deane (2002).

鈥淭hese seals have been important members of the 糖心视频 community and have a decades-long history of community engagement through the Department of Ocean Sciences鈥 public education program,鈥 said Dr. Travis Fridgen, dean of Science. 鈥淎pproximately 22,000 people visit the seal outdoor viewing platform each summer, and hundreds of students have gained employment and volunteer experience with the seals, giving them hands-on learning opportunities in the field of animal husbandry.鈥
Seals are social animals. Since Babette鈥檚 passing, there has been discussion around the need for a plan for the remaining pair.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important to us that we place them together.鈥
鈥淲e have been considering the long-term needs and well-being of the seals for some time now,鈥 said Dr. Jennifer Keyte, university veterinarian and director of Animal Care and Veterinary Resources. 鈥淭yler and Deane are so well-loved here, especially by their caretakers. It鈥檚 important to us that we place them together.鈥
Making a decision to relocate the seals will be a difficult one, but Dr. Fridgen says the goal is to determine the best plan for a humane, enriched and social environment for their future.