Sometimes referred to as "the Serengeti of the Sea," the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary is known both nationally and internationally as a "hot spot" for viewing marine wildlife. Shorelines and offshore waters provide many opportunities for viewing whales, dolphins, seals, sea lions and sea otters.
The sanctuary has one of the most diverse and abundant assemblages of marine mammals in the world, including twenty-seven species of cetacean (whales, dolphins, and porpoises), six species of pinniped (seals and sea lions) and one species of fissiped (sea otter). This diversity and abundance is due to a number of important, related factors:
Cetaceans
The most studied cetacean in the sanctuary is the eastern Pacific population of the gray whale, Eschrictius robustus. Gray whales spend winter months in shallow lagoons in Baja California, Mexico. Calves are born there, and the whales mate in the tropical waters.
In the spring, they migrate north through the sanctuary to rich feeding areas in the Bering, Beaufort and Siberian Seas. Then, as sea ice forms in winter, the whales head south again. This annual voyage along North America's West Coast can be as long as 17,700 kilometers (11,000 miles).
In the 1700s, whalers followed the gray whale migration to hunt and slaughter the giants for whale oil and other products. Lookouts were placed along points and promontories, and when whales were sighted, shore whaling vessels were launched. Some of California¹s coastal towns, including San Simeon and Pacific Grove, were whaling stations.
Today, researchers use the very same lookout spots to monitor and count the whales on their annual migration.
Now protected from whalers, gray whales are still hunted by predatory orcas (killer whales), Orcinus orca. Hunting in family groups, or pods, orcas follow gray whale cow-calf pairs on their spring northward migration and attack them as they cross Monterey Bay.
Other large whales, including blue whales, Balaenoptera musculus musculus, and humpback whales, Megaptera novaeangliae, move into the sanctuary in the summer and fall to feed in its productive waters. Movements of smaller cetaceans are likely associated with local changes in oceanographic conditions and prey abundance.
Pinnipeds
Of the six pinniped species found in the sanctuary, three are commonly seen from shore: the California sea lion, Zalophus californianus; the northern elephant seal, Mirounga angustirostris; and the Pacific harbor seal, Phoca vitulina. The northern fur seal, Callorhinus ursinus, migrates in offshore waters and is rarely seen near land. The Steller sea lion, Eumetopias jubatus, has experienced declining numbers throughout its range, while the Guadalupe fur seal, Arctocephalus townsendi, has been reported from stranding records.
Dignitaries with ceremonial shovels at the groundbreaking of the Sanctuary Exploration Center in Santa Cruz, CA.
Pod of Northern Right Whale Dolphins
Pinnipeds use sanctuary waters for feeding, migration and breeding.
In the spring months, sea lions and fur seals migrate through the sanctuary to breeding areas in southern California and Baja California, including the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. In August and September, they take advantage of late summer productivity along the central coast to travel to northern feeding areas.
Sea lions can be observed resting on offshore rocks throughout the Monterey Bay sanctuary. Some sea lions become accustomed to human environments and haul out on docks and piers, begging for food from eager tourists.
During winter months, northern elephant seals travel through the sanctuary on their way to and from breeding areas. Most elephant seals breed on the Channel Islands, while some travel as far south as Baja California.
The easiest places to observe elephant seals during their breeding season are Año Nuevo and Piedras Blancas:
Elkhorn Slough supports a large population of harbor seals, and another very scenic place to observe them is Point Lobos State Reserve. Harbor seal pupping occurs from February into May. One of the best places to observe harbor seals during the pupping season is at Hopkins Marine Life Refuge, where these seals give birth and nurse pups only meters away from downtown Monterey.
Sea Otter
Sea otters once occurred in a continuous range from the Aleutian Islands south to Baja California, but excessive hunting in the 1700s nearly wiped out the species. A small group survived the fur trade and was discovered off Point Sur in 1938 during the construction of the Big Sur Highway.
This group has expanded north and south, with most of its range occurring within the sanctuary. For decades now, the population has wavered around 2,300 to 2,500 animals.
Since 2000, TOPP had been exploring the Pacific Ocean using a carefully selected group of animals to gather data about their world. A pilot program of the Census of Marine Life, it is an international endeavor to determine what lives, has lived and will live in the world's ocean. Ultimately, scientists will draw upon their data to build models of Pacific ecosystems.
Collaborative Survey of Cetacean Abundance and the Pelagic Ecosystem (CSCAPE)
West Coast CSCAPE is a collaboration between NOAA Fisheries and the National Marine Sanctuary Program to assess the abundance and distribution of marine mammals and to characterize the pelagic ecosystem out to approximately 300 nautical miles off the U.S. West Coast.
Center for Integrated Marine Technologies (CIMT): Wind to Whales
CIMT is an interdisciplinary coastal research consortium that integrates data collected via remote sensing, moorings and ship-board surveys in the Monterey Bay region. CIMT uses these technologies to investigate linkages among coastal upwelling, nutrient delivery, phytoplankton and organisms at higher trophic levels (squid, fishes, seabirds, sea turtles, seals and whales).
The sanctuary has one of the most diverse and abundant assemblages of marine mammals in the world, including twenty-seven species of cetacean (whales, dolphins, and porpoises), six species of pinniped (seals and sea lions) and one species of fissiped (sea otter). This diversity and abundance is due to a number of important, related factors:
- California's central coast is located on a migration pathway between the Arctic feeding grounds and the temperate and tropical breeding areas for many marine mammal species.
- These waters' great productivity is enhanced by annual upwelling cycles that pull nutrients from deep-ocean canyons into the water column.
- These nutrients are consumed by planktonic organisms that support the entire food chain.
- The sanctuary's habitat diversity provides a variety of places for marine mammals to feed, rest and breed.
- The sanctuary itself plays an important role in protecting marine mammals from harassment and exploitation.
Reporting tagged, sick/injured, or dead marine mammals on the beach
Following these guidelines will improve response time to the marine mammal. In all cases, do not touch or closely approach the animal, and please advise others to do the same. When contacting one of the groups below, be sure to describe the condition of the animal, its specific location, and provide your contact information.
To report tags observed on live marine mammals, go to this web site: http://www.marinemammalcenter.org/what-we-do/rescue/report-a-flipper-tag.html
Live stranded seal, sea lion, whale, dolphin, or turtle: call the Marine Mammal Center at 831-633-6298.
Live or dead stranded sea otter: call the Monterey Bay Aquarium at 831-648-4840.
Dead stranded seal, sea lion, whale, dolphin, or turtle in MONTEREY COUNTY (south of Pajaro River): call Moss Landing Marine Laboratories at 831-771-4422.
Dead stranded seal, sea lion, whale dolphin, or turtle in SANTA CRUZ COUNTY (north of Pajaro River): call the Long Marine Lab Stranding Network at 831-212-1272.
Following these guidelines will improve response time to the marine mammal. In all cases, do not touch or closely approach the animal, and please advise others to do the same. When contacting one of the groups below, be sure to describe the condition of the animal, its specific location, and provide your contact information.
To report tags observed on live marine mammals, go to this web site: http://www.marinemammalcenter.org/what-we-do/rescue/report-a-flipper-tag.html
Live stranded seal, sea lion, whale, dolphin, or turtle: call the Marine Mammal Center at 831-633-6298.
Live or dead stranded sea otter: call the Monterey Bay Aquarium at 831-648-4840.
Dead stranded seal, sea lion, whale, dolphin, or turtle in MONTEREY COUNTY (south of Pajaro River): call Moss Landing Marine Laboratories at 831-771-4422.
Dead stranded seal, sea lion, whale dolphin, or turtle in SANTA CRUZ COUNTY (north of Pajaro River): call the Long Marine Lab Stranding Network at 831-212-1272.
Cetaceans
The most studied cetacean in the sanctuary is the eastern Pacific population of the gray whale, Eschrictius robustus. Gray whales spend winter months in shallow lagoons in Baja California, Mexico. Calves are born there, and the whales mate in the tropical waters.
In the spring, they migrate north through the sanctuary to rich feeding areas in the Bering, Beaufort and Siberian Seas. Then, as sea ice forms in winter, the whales head south again. This annual voyage along North America's West Coast can be as long as 17,700 kilometers (11,000 miles).
In the 1700s, whalers followed the gray whale migration to hunt and slaughter the giants for whale oil and other products. Lookouts were placed along points and promontories, and when whales were sighted, shore whaling vessels were launched. Some of California¹s coastal towns, including San Simeon and Pacific Grove, were whaling stations.
Today, researchers use the very same lookout spots to monitor and count the whales on their annual migration.
Now protected from whalers, gray whales are still hunted by predatory orcas (killer whales), Orcinus orca. Hunting in family groups, or pods, orcas follow gray whale cow-calf pairs on their spring northward migration and attack them as they cross Monterey Bay.
Other large whales, including blue whales, Balaenoptera musculus musculus, and humpback whales, Megaptera novaeangliae, move into the sanctuary in the summer and fall to feed in its productive waters. Movements of smaller cetaceans are likely associated with local changes in oceanographic conditions and prey abundance.
Pinnipeds
Of the six pinniped species found in the sanctuary, three are commonly seen from shore: the California sea lion, Zalophus californianus; the northern elephant seal, Mirounga angustirostris; and the Pacific harbor seal, Phoca vitulina. The northern fur seal, Callorhinus ursinus, migrates in offshore waters and is rarely seen near land. The Steller sea lion, Eumetopias jubatus, has experienced declining numbers throughout its range, while the Guadalupe fur seal, Arctocephalus townsendi, has been reported from stranding records.
Dignitaries with ceremonial shovels at the groundbreaking of the Sanctuary Exploration Center in Santa Cruz, CA.
Pod of Northern Right Whale Dolphins
In the spring months, sea lions and fur seals migrate through the sanctuary to breeding areas in southern California and Baja California, including the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. In August and September, they take advantage of late summer productivity along the central coast to travel to northern feeding areas.
Sea lions can be observed resting on offshore rocks throughout the Monterey Bay sanctuary. Some sea lions become accustomed to human environments and haul out on docks and piers, begging for food from eager tourists.
During winter months, northern elephant seals travel through the sanctuary on their way to and from breeding areas. Most elephant seals breed on the Channel Islands, while some travel as far south as Baja California.
The easiest places to observe elephant seals during their breeding season are Año Nuevo and Piedras Blancas:
- Año Nuevo Island supports a large elephant seal breeding colony, which researchers at UC Santa Cruz have monitored and studied since its inception in 1968. Elephant seals began pupping and breeding on the mainland at Año Nuevo, and since then, several other mainland colonies have developed.
- Piedras Blancas has the largest mainland colony of northern elephant seals, with more than 14,000 individuals during the peak season (January to March).
Elkhorn Slough supports a large population of harbor seals, and another very scenic place to observe them is Point Lobos State Reserve. Harbor seal pupping occurs from February into May. One of the best places to observe harbor seals during the pupping season is at Hopkins Marine Life Refuge, where these seals give birth and nurse pups only meters away from downtown Monterey.
Sea Otter
Sea otters once occurred in a continuous range from the Aleutian Islands south to Baja California, but excessive hunting in the 1700s nearly wiped out the species. A small group survived the fur trade and was discovered off Point Sur in 1938 during the construction of the Big Sur Highway.
This group has expanded north and south, with most of its range occurring within the sanctuary. For decades now, the population has wavered around 2,300 to 2,500 animals.
Monitoring
Tagging of Pacific Pelagics (TOPP)Since 2000, TOPP had been exploring the Pacific Ocean using a carefully selected group of animals to gather data about their world. A pilot program of the Census of Marine Life, it is an international endeavor to determine what lives, has lived and will live in the world's ocean. Ultimately, scientists will draw upon their data to build models of Pacific ecosystems.
West Coast CSCAPE is a collaboration between NOAA Fisheries and the National Marine Sanctuary Program to assess the abundance and distribution of marine mammals and to characterize the pelagic ecosystem out to approximately 300 nautical miles off the U.S. West Coast.
Center for Integrated Marine Technologies (CIMT): Wind to Whales
CIMT is an interdisciplinary coastal research consortium that integrates data collected via remote sensing, moorings and ship-board surveys in the Monterey Bay region. CIMT uses these technologies to investigate linkages among coastal upwelling, nutrient delivery, phytoplankton and organisms at higher trophic levels (squid, fishes, seabirds, sea turtles, seals and whales).


