A sea otter mother grooming her pup. Photo credit: Gena Bentall of Sea Otter Savvy.

A sea otter mother grooming her pup. Photo credit: Gena Bentall of Sea Otter Savvy.

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Sea otters’ luscious pelts have been the author of their success, keeping the charming creatures buoyant and warm in even the chilliest waters. Yet, during the 19th century they were hunted to the verge of extinction, as the fur trade cashed in on their luxurious pelts. By 1938, only a tiny population of ∼50 remained clinging to the central California coast. Since then, the population has battled back; however, the charismatic animals are still at risk from crude oil spilled by offshore rigs. But no one knew how severely crude oil impacts the buoyancy of sea otter fur or how well it recovers after cleaning. And Kate Riordan from California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo (Cal Poly SLO), USA, adds that the fur of newborn sea otter pups was believed to be particularly buoyant, but no one had checked. Curious to answer these questions, Riordan joined forces with Nicole Thometz (University of San Francisco, USA), Francesca Batac [California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW), USA] and Heather Liwanag (Cal Poly SLO) to investigate.

Sea otters in the wild die naturally for many reasons and are collected by the CDFW – which monitors the health of the population – so they passed on sections of a few precious pelts from southern sea otters ranging in age from tiny pups up to 9-year-old adults to Riordan, Annika Dean and Sarah Kerr (both from Cal Poly SLO). After cleaning the pelt, the team then weighed a 25 cm2 portion from each in air and in water to determine the fur's buoyancy. However, when they compared the buoyancy of the youngsters’ pelts with that of the fully grown adults, there was no difference. All of the sea otter fur portions had a buoyancy of ∼0.3 N, about the same as a 10 g piece of cork, so a sea otter pup's fur is no more buoyant than the fur of its parents. However, when the team calculated the impact of the fur's buoyancy on the pups’ entire bodies, the youngsters’ fur was almost three times more buoyant for their body mass than that of the adults, thanks to the pups’ relatively large surface areas for their size. This allows the pups to trap more air for their smaller body mass to make them extremely buoyant and keep them bobbing at the surface while mum's off hunting.

But how did a dousing of crude oil affect the fur's buoyancy? This time, the team massaged crude oil into the fur, mimicking how sea otters groom naturally – inadvertently rubbing the pollution into their pelts – before measuring the oil-sodden fur's buoyancy. Sure enough, the fur's buoyancy plummeted by almost 55% to 0.145 N, making it much more difficult for the animals to remain afloat. The reduction in buoyancy coupled with the loss of insulation would almost certainly prove fatal in the wild.

Fortunately, conservationists swoop in quickly in the event of major crude oil spills, drenching oil-soaked creatures in detergent to rid them of the oil, but how well does the buoyancy of sea otter fur recover after cleaning? Riordan and colleagues gently washed each oiled pelt with Dawn® Ultra Dishwashing Liquid, before rinsing thoroughly, finishing with a blow-dry and remeasuring the pelt's buoyancy. As they had hoped, the buoyancy of the fur improved, but only by 36% to 0.197 N, still almost 40% down from the fur's natural buoyancy.

The team suspects that living sea otters may recover better after cleaning because they groom continually, but they suggest that it is essential that detergent is thoroughly rinsed off after cleaning to ensure that oiled sea otters recover fully.

Riordan
,
K.
,
Dean
,
A. E.
,
Kerr
,
S. J.
,
Thometz
,
N. M.
,
Batac
,
F. I.
and
Liwanag
,
H. E. M.
(
2024
).
A novel comparison of southern sea otter (Enhydra lutris nereis) fur buoyancy across ontogeny
.
J. Exp. Biol
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227
,
jeb247134
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