Last week, gun-wielding conservation officers stuffed a 500-lb elephant seal in the back of a van, drove him along a winding highway in western Canada and left him on a remote beach âfar from human habitationâ.
The plan was to move the young seal far from British Columbiaâs capital city, where over the last year, he has developed a reputation for ending up in âunusual locationsâ, including flower beds, city parks and busy roads.
Emerson, as he is known to locals, had other plans.
Less than a week after he was removed from Victoria, he made an âepicâ 126-mile trek along the rugged west coast of Vancouver Island back to the city, a return that has left conservation officers in disbelief.
But Emersonâs presence and growing popularity has alarmed those same officers, as the public takes increasingly risky behaviour around the animal, including one group who encouraged a child to pet his nose.
Born in Washington state in 2022, the young pup was cared for by a group of volunteers after his mother left. Last year, he began popping up on beaches around Victoria and has since taken on near-celebrity status. When word spreads that he has been spotted lounging in the sun or sleeping between parked cars, crowds quickly gather with their cameras drawn.
âIâve been coming down every day to see him for a month â big, old, fat thing,â Peggy McCann told local media last year. âEverybody else here also started watching him. I just think it was marvelous. Itâs so nice to see this.â
Northern elephant seals spend most of their lives in the water but they come ashore to breed and moult. Emerson is currently doing the latter, undergoing a month-long biological process where he sheds all of his fur and underlying layer of skin that is âhighly taxingâ on the seal, said Canadaâs department of fisheries and oceans.
On 1 April, he was spotted moulting in a busy park, prompting conservation officers to cordon off the area in yellow caution tape and post a sign warning the public to stay back â a request that was ignored.
Five days later, he was moved out of the city to better let him to moult âin peaceâ, the department said.
But his return â and apparent lack of interest in people â has created a troubling situation for conservation staff. Although Emerson has so far seemed unmoved by the gawking crowds, reports of harassment have increased to âconcerning levelsâ.
âPeople have approached Emerson to try and pet him, take selfies with him, and on occasion prompted their small children to do the same,â the department said. âIf public disturbances of the elephant seal continue, someone will get hurt.â
Conservation staff say they will probably be forced to move the young pinniped again.
âHowever, it would be ideal if this could be avoided to allow Emerson his space to complete his moulting process in the location he has chosen.â