cpanel

Administrative Login Form

THIS LOGIN is for administrators, authors and editors only. If you would like to login to our FORUMS, go to forums in the main menu to the right where you can login or register. Thank you.





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

User1


user2


OEM Software Discount Download
Buy Cheap OEM Software Discount Download
Adobe Dreamweaver CS5 MAC
Adobe Photoshop CS5 Extended MAC
Autodesk Navisworks Manage 2011
Adobe Flash Professional CS5
Adobe Flash Professional CS5 MAC
Autodesk Algor Simulation Professional 2011
Autodesk AutoCAD Civil 3D 2011
Adobe Illustrator CS5
Adobe Illustrator CS5 MAC
Autodesk AutoCAD Structural Detailing 2011
Autodesk Ecotect Analysis 2011
Autodesk MotionBuilder 2011
Autodesk MotionBuilder 2011
Autodesk Revit Architecture 2011
Autodesk Softimage 2011
Autodesk Revit MEP 2011
Autodesk Revit Structure 2011
Autodesk Robot Structural Analysis Professional 2011
Adobe Premiere Pro CS5 MAC
Adobe Premiere Pro CS5
Adobe Contribute CS5 MAC
Adobe Contribute CS5
Adobe Fireworks CS5 MAC
Adobe Fireworks CS5
Cyberlink PowerDVD 10 Ultra 3D
Corel Draw Graphics Suite X5
Autodesk 3ds Max 2011
Autodesk 3ds Max Design 2011
Autodesk Maya 2011 32-bit
Autodesk Maya 2011 64-bit
Autodesk Mudbox 2011 32-bit
Autodesk Mudbox 2011 64-bit
Adobe Creative Suite 5 Design Premium
Adobe Creative Suite 5 Design Premium MAC
Corel PaintShop Photo Pro X3
Corel VideoStudio Pro X3
Adobe Creative Suite 5 Web Premium
Adobe Creative Suite 5 Web Premium MAC
Adobe InCopy CS5
Adobe InCopy CS5 MAC
Adobe SoundBooth CS5
Adobe SoundBooth CS5 MAC
Parallels Desktop 4 for Windows
Adobe Creative Suite 5 Production Premium
Adobe Creative Suite 5 Production Premium MAC
RosettaStone German Level 1 2 3 4 and 5 Set
Adobe Creative Suite 5 Design Standart
RosettaStone French Level 1 2 and 3 Set
RosettaStone Japanese Level 1 2 and 3 Set
RosettaStone Korean Level 1 2 and 3 Set
RosettaStone Chinese Mandarin Level 1 2 and 3 Set
RosettaStone Chinese Mandarin Level 1 2 and 3 Set MAC
RosettaStone German Level 1 2 3 4 and 5 Set MAC
RosettaStone French Level 1 2 and 3 Set MAC
RosettaStone Japanese Level 1 2 and 3 Set MAC
RosettaStone Spanish Spain Level 1 2 3 4 and 5 Set MAC
RosettaStone Korean Level 1 2 and 3 Set MAC
Adobe Photoshop LightRoom 3
Friday, 03 September 2010
Vintage Fashion Guild VFG Label Resource
shop at vfg member sites
Otter Print E-mail
Written by Pauline Cameron/alonesolo & Katie Kemsley/in-like-flynn!   
Sea Otter: "Sea Otters have absolutely the finest fur in the animal kingdom. They have an incredibly dense and beautiful fur, up to one million hairs per square inch. By comparison, a dog has about 60,000 hairs per square inch. Otters don't have a blubber layer like most marine mammals, it's the fur that keeps them warm and allows them to live in Alaskan waters." Jim Bodkin, marine biologist.

Image
Otter Coat courtesy in-like-flynn!
River Otter: also known as the Land Otter, ranges throughout most of the Canada and the United States, especially throughout Alaska and the offshore islands of the Bering Sea. Adults weigh 15 to 35 pounds (6.8-15 kg) and are 40 to 60 inches (102-152 cm) in length. On average females are about 25 percent smaller than males. When prime, River Otter fur appears black-brown, with the belly slightly lighter in color than its back. The chin and throat are grayish. Otter fur consists of a very dense undercoat overlaid with longer guard hairs, which are usually removed by furriers.

Giant Otter: is the South American cousin to the Sea and River Otters of North America, as well as those of Europe and Africa. It can grow to more than 6 feet (2 meters) long and 70 pounds (32 kg), nearly twice as large as its American counterparts. Giant Otters once were found throughout the tropical rain forests of the Amazon, down to Brazil's Pantanal, the world's largest wetland. Today they are found only in the most remote waters in tropical South America.


Fur Your Information!

Sea Otters spend almost half their day grooming their fur in order to keep it waterproof and warm - dirty, matted fur would soon lose its insulating properties and put the Otter in peril from cold. This is because the Sea Otter has no insulating fat or blubber like seals and whales. Otter fur is the densest of any mammals, with over 800 million hairs on a large adult! Otter groups are called 'rafts'.

It is the Otter's fur that brought the animal to the brink of extinction. In 1745, when fur traders advanced from Siberia eastward along the Aleutian Island chain to Alaska's Pacific coast, they were seeking Otter pelts for the Asian fur market. The result was drastic. A species that once numbered 300,000 and spread from the Baja Peninsula to the Sea of Japan had by 1899 dwindled to a few thousand Otters in Alaska and a few dozen in California. Attempts at raising them in captivity failed in the late 19th century.

In 1911, the United States, Japan, Russia and Canada entered into a treaty 'for the protection of fur Seals and Sea Otters in the North Pacific', by outlawing the killing of fur Seals and Sea Otters by anyone except native peoples. The U.S. was charged with enforcing the treaty and the Sea Otter in Alaska made a remarkable recovery. Today an estimated 150,000 occupy Alaska waters and about 2500 exist along the California coast. Otters only known hunters are humans, Killer whales and Bald eagles are known to hunt Otter pups when other food is scarce.

Sea Otters may play an important role in the kelp forest ecosystem. Otters eat sea urchins, which graze on algae such as kelp. Sea urchins tend to overgraze kelp beds, disturbing the 'holdfast' (root-like base) of the kelp which can cause it to break loose and wash away, damaging the habitat and exposing the many fish, mollusks, crabs and other creatures that live in the kelp.

Giant Otters have no predators except humans, who once hunted them widely for their fur. Hunting for their luxuriant fur along with habitat loss, has reduced their numbers to an estimated 2,000 to 5,000. Hunting Otters was profitable and easy. A single giant Otter pelt was worth more than a year's annual wage for a local resident. Otters are very inquisitive and groups approaching canoes to get a better look were easy targets. The fur trade nearly eliminated them by 1970; between 1950 and 1970, Peru alone exported 20,000 Otter pelts. In 1973, giant Otters were listed on Appendix I of CITIES, which means all trade in their pelts, was prohibited. Prohibiting trade in pelts eliminated the biggest threat to the Otter's survival.