Mammals of Korea: a review of their taxonomy, distribution and conservation status
Author
Jo, Yeong-Seok
Author
Baccus, John T.
Author
Koprowski, John L.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-11-19
4522
1
1
216
journal article
27944
10.11646/zootaxa.4522.1.1
58e0c7c5-75ec-4b1b-beb0-d01527f710f9
1175-5326
2610198
C24EFA8A-A5A0-4B06-A0A9-632F542B9529
Phoca largha
Pallas, 1811
—Spotted Seal, largha seal
Phoca
largha
Pallas, 1811 p.113
;
Type
locality- eastern coast of
Kamchatka
;
Won & Smith, 1999 p.29
;
Kim, 2004 p.194
.
P. vitulina
:
Ellerman & Morrison-Scott, 1951 p.328
;
Won, 1968 p.336
.
P. vitulina largha
:
Ellerman & Morrison-Scott, 1951 p.328
;
Won, 1958 p.436
;
Won, 1968 p.338
.
Range:
A large colony of several hundred
P
.
largha
migrates annually through the Yellow Sea, East Sea, and
Korea
Strait and moves onto Baengnyeong Island in the Yellow Sea (
Won & Yoo 2004;
Fig. 64
). Also, several individuals reside along the coast in small rocky islets near Gyeongpo beach, Gangneung City in the East Sea and Garorim Bay in the Yellow Sea (NIBR 2015).
Remarks:
Based on external appearances, harbor and spotted seals are not readily distinguishable from each other. The two species are very similar in appearance, but the spots of the harbor seal tend to appear more faded and sparser on the underside of the body. The spotted seal is slightly smaller than the harbor seal and has a darker face and muzzle, and there are behavioral differences between the two species (
Shirihai & Jarrett 2006
). MtDNA studies confirmed the respective uniqueness of harbor and spotted seals at the species level (
O’Corry-Crowe & Westlake 1997
).
FIGURE 63.
Range map of
Histriophoca fasciata
in Korea.
FIGURE 64.
Range map of
Phoca largha
in Korea.
Conservation status:
The Cultural and Heritage Administration in
South Korea
designated
P. largha
as a Natural Monument in 1982, followed by a declaration as an Endangered Species in 1997 by the Ministry of Environment and a Protected Marine Species in 2007 by the Ministry of Land, Transports and Maritime Affairs. Korean populations are regarded as ‘Endangered’ in both the North and South Korean Red Data Books (MAB
National Committee of DPR
Korea
2002
; NIBR 2012). Populations declined from 8,000 individuals in 1940s to
2,300 in
1980s and
600–800 in
2010 (NIBR 2012).