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Each winter, elephant seals arrive at their breeding beaches in Mexico and California.
Males are the first to arrive and they fight each other to establish dominance.
During this time, dominant males will often inflate their noses and produce a noise that sounds like a drum to warn lesser males away.
Females soon arrive, and associate with dominant males. Several days after coming onto the beaches the females give birth to the pups they have been carrying since last year.
Pups weigh 75 pounds (35 kg) or more and are about four feet (1.25 m) in length. The pups nurse for about 28 days, generally gaining about 10 lbs (4.5 kg) a day.
Around the time of weaning, the mother will mate with one or more of the dominant males.
After the nursing period, the mother returns to sea. For the next two months, weaned pups, called weaners, remain on rookery beaches, venturing into the water for short periods of time, perfecting their swimming and feeding abilities.
Eventually, the pups will learn to feed on squid, fish, and occasionally small sharks.
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