Leopard seals of the Antarctic rip their prey to shreds with sharp, strong incisors, but can become placid filter feeders when they need to (more…)
More by Skye Wishart
Leopard seals of the Antarctic rip their prey to shreds with sharp, strong incisors, but can become placid filter feeders when they need to

Using video footage and analysing seal skulls, Australian researchers have discovered that leopard seals also use teeth normally reserved for piercing and shredding to delicately strain their food.
Because they lack teeth for chewing, they seize prey such as penguins, smaller seals or squid with their front teeth (canines and incisors) and shake the animal apart until it is in pieces small enough to swallow whole—the researchers describe it as a “raptorial ‘grip and tear’ feeding style”.
But another leopard seal food source, shrimp-like Antarctic krill, can be consumed only by filter feeding. The research team discovered that the seals use teeth further back in the mouth, the postcanines—delicate side teeth which have long, sharp cusps that interlock to act as a sieve, with spaces only a few millimetres wide. The seal draws in the krill and the water, and ejects the water through the teeth, leaving just the krill to be swallowed, in much the same way as a baleen whale eats.
Another Antarctic seal, the crabeater, also sieves krill but doesn’t have the robust front teeth to eat larger prey as well. (Incidentally, it doesn’t actually eat crabs.)
Just how many of the five-centimetre-long crustaceans leopard seals can strain in one gulp is not known, but they have been found with some 100,000 krill in their stomach, so specialised dentition has given them the ability to augment their diet with a significant portion of very small prey, feeding from both ends of the food chain.
More by Skye Wishart

Leopard seals of the Antarctic rip their prey to shreds with sharp, strong incisors, but can become placid filter feeders when they need to (more…)
More by Skye Wishart
More by Skye Wishart
Subscribe to our free newsletter for news and prizes
3 FREE ARTICLES LEFT
3 FREE ARTICLES LEFT THIS MONTH
Unlimited access to every NZGeo story ever written and hundreds of hours of natural history documentaries on all your devices.
$1 trial for two weeks, thereafter $8.50 every two months, cancel any time
Signed in as . Sign out