It is hard to guess what a Ringed seal weights. But we have the answer:
An adult Ringed seal (Pusa hispida) on average weights 70.96 kg (156.45 lbs).
The Ringed seal is from the family Phocidae (genus: Pusa). It is usually born with about 4.5 kg (9.92 lbs). They can live for up to 46 years. When reaching adult age, they grow up to 1.29 meter (4′ 3″). Usually, Ringed seals have 1 babies per litter.
As a reference: An average human weights in at 62 kg (137 lbs) and reaches an average size of 1.65m (5′ 5″). Humans spend 280 days (40 weeks) in the womb of their mother and reach around 75 years of age.
The ringed seal (Pusa hispida or Phoca hispida), also known as the jar seal, as netsik or nattiq by the Inuit, is an earless seal inhabiting the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions. The ringed seal is a relatively small seal, rarely greater than 1.5 m in length, with a distinctive patterning of dark spots surrounded by light grey rings, hence its common name. It is the most abundant and wide-ranging ice seal in the Northern Hemisphere: ranging throughout the Arctic Ocean, into the Bering Sea and Okhotsk Sea as far south as the northern coast of Japan in the Pacific, and throughout the North Atlantic coasts of Greenland and Scandinavia as far south as Newfoundland, and include two freshwater subspecies in northern Europe. Ringed seals are one of the primary prey of polar bears and killer whales, and have long been a component of the diet of indigenous people of the Arctic.
Animals of the same family as a Ringed seal
We found other animals of the Phocidae family:
- Caspian seal bringing 62.33 kilos (137.41 lbs) to the scale
- Ringed seal bringing 71.1 kilos (156.75 lbs) to the scale
- Leopard seal bringing 352.84 kilos (777.88 lbs) to the scale
- Hooded seal bringing 278.95 kilos (614.98 lbs) to the scale
- Ross seal bringing 208.63 kilos (459.95 lbs) to the scale
- Grey seal bringing 197.29 kilos (434.95 lbs) to the scale
- Weddell seal bringing 400 kilos (881.85 lbs) to the scale
- Crabeater seal bringing 225 kilos (496.04 lbs) to the scale
- Harbor seal bringing 87.31 kilos (192.49 lbs) to the scale
- Bearded seal bringing 280 kilos (617.29 lbs) to the scale
Animals with the same weight as a Ringed seal
As a comparison, here are some other animals that weight as much as the Pusa hispida:
- Yellow-backed duiker with a weight of 61.65 kilos (135.91 lbs)
- Hirola with a weight of 79.13 kilos (174.45 lbs)
- South Andean deer with a weight of 69.02 kilos (152.16 lbs)
- South Asian river dolphin with a weight of 75.99 kilos (167.53 lbs)
- Aardvark with a weight of 56.85 kilos (125.33 lbs)
- Himalayan tahr with a weight of 68.26 kilos (150.49 lbs)
- Mountain goat with a weight of 71.84 kilos (158.38 lbs)
- West Caucasian tur with a weight of 60.73 kilos (133.89 lbs)
- Pantropical spotted dolphin with a weight of 65.72 kilos (144.89 lbs)
- Puku with a weight of 71.23 kilos (157.04 lbs)
Animals with the same size as a Ringed seal
Not that size really matters, but it makes things comparable. So here are a couple of animals that are as big as Ringed seal:
- Ribbon seal with a size of 1.53 meter (5′ 1″)
- Guanaco with a size of 1.47 meter (4′ 11″)
- Caspian seal with a size of 1.41 meter (4′ 8″)
- Grant’s gazelle with a size of 1.53 meter (5′ 1″)
- Roan antelope with a size of 1.15 meter (3′ 10″)
- White-tailed deer with a size of 1.51 meter (5′ 0″)
- Harbour porpoise with a size of 1.53 meter (5′ 1″)
- Oribi with a size of 1.16 meter (3′ 10″)
- Philippine warty pig with a size of 1.35 meter (4′ 6″)
- Baikal seal with a size of 1.28 meter (4′ 3″)
Animals with the same litter size as a Ringed seal
Here is a list of animals that have the same number of babies per litter (1) as a Ringed seal:
- Lesser noctule
- Smoky pocket gopher
- Diana monkey
- Yellow-tailed woolly monkey
- Indian hog deer
- Pacarana
- Banana pipistrelle
- Black-spotted cuscus
- Scrub hare
- Dugong
Animals with the same life expectancy as a Ringed seal
Completely different animals, but becoming as old as a Ringed seal:
- Black capuchin with an average maximal age of 44 years
- Polar bear with an average maximal age of 38.17 years
- Indian rhinoceros with an average maximal age of 49 years
- Beluga whale with an average maximal age of 40 years
- Guinea baboon with an average maximal age of 40 years
- Caspian seal with an average maximal age of 50 years
- Bonobo with an average maximal age of 48 years
- Melon-headed whale with an average maximal age of 47 years
- Narwhal with an average maximal age of 40 years
- Lar gibbon with an average maximal age of 40 years