Thomas D. Williams, DVM
Sea otters have been characterized as having sexually segregated social
organizations, with "male areas" and "female areas".1,2,3-5
Adult males enter female areas and establish a territory.4-8 Males may copulate in
serial fashion with females that enter their territories. The copulation rates of territorial
males correlate closely with the shelter and food availability of that particular
territory.
Evidence, based on morphological histological examinations of
reproductive organs, field observations and captive animals observations, indicate the sea
otter breeds throughout the year with breeding activity reaching a peak in the fall.
Parturition occurs in all months of the year with a maximum frequency in spring. Some
features of the reproductive cycle such as the time of year during which peaks in mating and
pupping occur, the length of pup dependency periods, weights at birth, and the length of time
between successive reproductive attempts in females may vary depending on environmental
conditions and carrying capacity of the population.9 In general, reproduction is
more seasonal in Alaska than in California.
Age at sexual maturity can be estimated by physical characteristics. Sea
otter testicles increase in size until 5 to 6 years of age, after which their size does not
change, suggesting that male sea otters reach sexual maturity at this time.3 In
Alaska, males less than 6 years of age are not able to successfully maintain territories and
breed. However, in captivity a 2 year old has exhibited mating behavior and copulated. A
captive male at 19 years of age fathered young at the Vancouver Aquarium.11 The
female sea otter reaches puberty at 3 to 4 years of age.
When mating, a pair bonds for 1 to 4 days. During this period, the pair
conducts all activities in close proximity to each other and several copulations may take
place in the water. During copulation, the male grabs the female by the nose and mounts her
from the back. Coitus is preceded and followed by mutual nuzzling, pawing, and tumbling
together.12 Occasionally, females are seriously injured and stressed in breeding
attempts. The pair-bond is terminated when the female leaves the male's territory. At this
time the male may attempt to prevent the female from leaving. It appears that a female's
sexual receptivity ends before pair-bond dissolution and is likely to be the reason the
pair-bond ends. It is suggested that estrus is 3 to 4 days long based on the duration of the
pair-bond.2,6
Parturition has been observed on land, but usually occurs in
water.2,23-15 The normal pupping interval is about 12 months16 and the
gestation period approximately four to six months. Pups weigh 1.8 to 1.9 kg at birth. Twin
fetuses have been observed at necropsy and in one case, the dystocia was the apparent cause
of death of the mother.17
Recently, twinning was observed in the wild but the mother abandoned one
of the pups on the first day.18 The abandoned pup was retrieved and raised at the
Monterey Bay Aquarium. Successful rearing of twins has not been reported in sea otters.
Parental care, provided exclusively by the female, continues for five to
eight months. Such intensive maternal investment helps prepare the young for survival in the
harsh aquatic environment after weaning. The sea otter pup's nourishment comes exclusively
from mothers's milk during the first month of age; by four months of age the pup subsists
mainly on solid food obtained by the mother. At fourteen weeks of age, most pups are able to
swim independently, dive proficiently, and groom themselves without the assistance of their
mothers. Pups are able to capture and break open hard-shelled prey, using rock tools, by 20
to 24 weeks of age.19 Pups become independent at body weights as low as 10 kg or
as high as 20 kg. Mothers in poor health may abandon their pups before they're old enough to
survive on their own. Severe storms periods may also promote premature separation of
female/pup pairs.20
References
1. Lensink, C.J. The history and status of sea otters in
Alaska. Ph.D. Thesis, Purdue Univ., Lafayette, Indiana. 186pp. 1962.
2. Kenyon, K.W. The sea otter in the eastern Pacific Ocean. N.
Am. Fauna 68:1, 352 pp., 1969.
3. Schneider K.B. Sex and age segregation of sea otters. Alaska
Dept. Fish and Game, Juneau, Final Rep. Fed. Aid Wildl. Restor. Proj. W-17-4 through W-17-8.
45 pp. 1978.
4. Garshelis, D.L., and J.A. Garshelis. Movements and
management of sea otters in Alaska. J. Wildl. Manage. 48(3):665-678. 1984.
5. Garshelis, D.L., A.M. Johnson, and J.A. Garshelis. Social
organization of sea otters in Prince William Sound, Alaska. Can. J. Zool. 62:2648-2658.
1984.
6. Vandevere, J.E. Reproduction in the southern sea otter.Pages
221-227 in Proc. Seventh Annual Conference on Biological Sonar and Diving Mammals. Stanford
Res. Inst., Menlo Park, Calif. 1970.
7. Calkins, D.G., and P.C. Lent. Territoriality and mating
behavior in Prince William Sound sea otters. J. Mammal. 56(2):528-529. 1975.
8. Loughlin, T.R. Activity pattern, habitat partitioning, and
grooming behavior of the sea otter (Enhydra lutris) in California. Ph.D. Thesis, Univ.
California, Los Angeles 110 pp. 1977.
9. Rotterman, L.M., T. Simon-Jackson. Sea otter Enhydra
lutris in Selected Marine Mammals of Alaska, Pub. no. PB88-178462, Lentfer, J.W., Ed.,
National Technical Information Service, Springfield, VA. pp. 237-275. 1988.
10. Garshelis, D.L. Ecology of sea otters in Prince William Sound,
Alaska. Ph.D. Thesis, Univ. Minnesota, Minneapolis. 321 pp. 1983.
11. Hewlett, Gil., Vancouver Aquarium, Vancouver British, Columbia,
Canada.
12. Shelley, Mark., Montery Bay Aquarium, Monterey, California, Video
Tape. 1988.
13. Barabash-Nikiforov,I.I., S.V. Marakov, and A.M. Nikolaev. The
Kalan or sea otter. Izdatel'stvo "Nauka," Leningrad. 184 pp. (Transl. from Russian
by A.L. Peabody, U.S. Dep. Commer., NOAA, Natl. Mar. Fish. Serv., Off. Int. Fish., Language
Services Div., Washington, DC 20235). 1968.
14. Antrim, J.E., and L.H. Cornell. Reproduction of the sea otter,
Enhydra lutris, captivity. Int. Zoo Yearb. 20:76-80. 1981.
15. Jameson, R.J. Evidence of birth of a sea otter on land in central
California. Calif. Fish and Game 69(2):122-123. 1983.
16. Jameson, R.J., and A.M. Johnson. Reproductive characteristics of
female sea otters (Enhydra lutris). U.S. Fish and Wildl. Serv., Natl. Ecology. Res.
Center, San Simeon Field Sta., Calif. In prep.
17. Williams, T.D., Mattison, J.A., and Ames, J.A. Twinning in a
California sea otter. J.Mammal. 61, 1980.
18. 18.Jameson, R.J., and J.L. Bodkin. An incidence of twinning in
the sea otter (Enhydra lutris). Mar. Mammal Sci. 2(4),:305-309. 1986.
19. Payne, S.F. and R.J. Jameson. Early behavioral development of the
sea otter, (Enhydra lutris). J. Mamm. 65(3):527-531. 1984.
20. Morejohn, G.V., J.A. Ames, and D.B. Lewis. Post Mortem Studies of
Sea Otters, (Enhydra lutris) in California. marine Resources Tech. Rept. No. 30,
Calif. Dept. of Fish and Game, 86pp., 1975.