In any ocean theme park, their exhibits may have seals and sea lions. Both animals have the same black eyes and big beards as their chubby bodies. For many people, doing sea lions is a star of performance, but many people often refer to performance as "seal performance". Most people are familiar with seals and sea lions, but they do not know how to distinguish between the two. These two mammals share many common abilities, but these "second representative strengths" differ greatly in many ways.
Sea lions, or wolves called Spanish, belong to the same family as seals and walruses. Galapagos sea lion is only six sea lions. They are believed to be California sea lily till recently, but the latest DNA studies confirm that they are unique species isolated from California sea lions about 2 million years ago. They are smaller than their cousin in California, their mouths are short and the forehead is small - and do not forget, like most Ecuadles ... they are very kind!
Galapagos has two kinds of sea lion, ubiquitous galapagos sea lion and more rare fur sea lion. Both types of sea lion are in the fins. In other words, it is the foot of the fin. I will explain the difference between these spiers and the following "real seal". But first, we must distinguish similarities and similarities between Galapagos sea lions and fur sea lions. Sea lion also has the ability to independently control fins. This will help them to change direction and better control the land underwater. By contrast, seals have weak forelimbs, thin furs, thin forepaws, thin ankles, and no fins at the rear. They are much smaller than sea lions. They walked on land by using these small appendages to move forward, and they behave like caterpillars. But their rear fins are stronger and push them harder underwater
Johnson said that the distinguishing features of seals and seals are their rear fins. Sea lions are easy to rotate, the ankles move on land, but the seals can not rotate; spend most of their time in the deep sea, usually squatting on land. Eel flaps protrude into sea lion, but ears penetrate seals. Other threats to seals and sea lions facing the coast are the risk that the fish they eat are poisoned by acid. City council members say that when fish eat algae infected from the red tide, marine mammals become poisoned and damage the brain. Other injuries include falling into a fishing net, injuring a ship, eating marine garbage, even even being attacked by a shark.