These wondrous sea wolves swim for miles and live off the watery wilds
In a remote stretch of rainforest on Canada's Pacific coast, a unique
population of wolves has taken to a life of the sea.
Wolves have forever had a storied place in the minds and hearts of
humans; and whether seen as threatening or predatory or magical or mysterious,
most people think they know wolves. But then there are the sea wolves.
Along the wild Pacific coast of British Columbia – a misty wonderland
of craggy glacier-gouged shores and temperate rainforest – there lives a
population of wolves genetically and behaviorally distinct from the rest.
They've traded in deer and sheep and mountain goats for the bounty of the sea.
They've been known to swim up to eight miles to get from the mainland to an
island; they live on barnacles and herring roe, seals and dead whales. Some 90
percent of their food comes directly from the ocean.
Ian McAllister, an award-winning photographer and author – and verified
sea wolf enthusiast – has long been fascinated by these singular creatures and
wanted to create a split-level shot that highlighted the wolves’ unique
relationship with the ocean, explains California Academy of Sciences' bioGraphic
magazine. Each spring, this particular family group visits the shore, drawn by
the lure of the season's offerings. As the wolves dipped into the sea and began
licking the protein-rich herring roe from the kelp, McAllister swam toward
them. "The curious canines approached him so closely that he could hear
them grunting into his snorkel," writes bioGraphic. "He took several
frames, then pushed back into deeper water without daring to look up."
Thankfully, even in the face of grunting sea canids, the shots
McAllister managed to take are stunning. The scene captured here beautifully
illustrating a species with the strength and grace to adapt to a decidedly non-lupine
habitat, launching the sea wolves into a whole new realm of magic and mystery.


No comments: