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Andrea Bogomolni giving her presention on Gray seals.

Andrea Bogomolni giving her presention on Gray seals.
Andrea Bogomolni giving her presention on Gray seals.
Andrea Bogomolni giving her presention on Gray seals.
Andrea Bogomolni giving her presention on Gray seals.
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222540
Kleindinst, Thomas N.
Andrea Bogomolni giving her presention on Gray seals.
Still Image
08/07/2013
graphics/Shark_Seal_Event/_DSC4236.jpg
Andrea Bogomolni is WHOI biologist and member of the Northwest Atlantic Seal Research Consortium.
Sharks-Seals Public Event at Redfield.
Image Of the Day caption:
WHOI biologist Andrea Bogomolni spoke about some of Cape Cod's most charismatic predators (and prey) during the WHOI public event White Sharks, Gray Seals on August 7, 2013. Bogomolni studies seals found off the coast of Cape Cod to better understand the role these marine mammals play as sentinels of the ocean ecosystem. Seals were bounty-hunted until the 1960s, said Bogomolni, under the belief that they were eating too many commercially important fish. Although seal hunting is no longer legal in the U.S., they are still vulnerable to entanglement, climate change, and habitat lossas well as their number one predator, sharks.
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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