Held every year during the last week in September, Sea Otter Awareness Week spotlights the important role of sea otters. Thirteen species exist around the world, living near the coasts of the East and North Pacific Ocean. None live here in Australia.Otters are part of the Mustelidae family, which is a family of carnivorous mammals that includes skunks, weasels, wolverines, and badgers. The sea otter is the largest member of the weasel family, yet the smallest marine mammal in North America.
Did you know?
• Sea otters have the thickest fur of any animal.
• A sea otter’s lung capacity is 2.5 times greater than that of similar-sized land mammals.They have been known to stay submerged for more than five minutes at a time.
• To keep its luxurious coat waterproof, an otter spends many hours a day cleaning and grooming. Such good grooming coats its fur with natural oils from their skin and fluffs it with insulating air bubbles.
• 90 percent of sea otters live in Alaska.
• Sea otters are considered a “keystone species” because they are critical to how an ecosystem functions as it has large-scale effects on the communities in which it lives.
• The World Conservation Union lists sea otters as endangered. Many of the ongoing threats to sea otters stem from humans, including oil spills, boat strikes, fishing gear entanglement, and habitat degradation due to global warming.
• The otter is one of the few mammals that use tools.
• Sea otters love to rest in groups. A group of resting otters is called a raft.
• Sea otters and river otters are not the same. Sea otters live in saltwater. River otters live on land and in freshwater. Sea otters are bigger than river otters.
Most of the children I teach will never see a sea otter, but they do like to read about animals and in particular true stories about animals who have been rescued.
Washed ashore alone, a tiny sea otter pup needs help! Soon, a rescuer is there, to take her in and keep her warm and fed. The pup faces challenges in her new life without her sea otter family. But with the love and care of her rescuer, she flourishes in her new home. Inspired by a true story, Pup 681 is a heartwarming and hopeful tale about family and love.
A Sea Otter to the Rescue by Thea Feldman
In an aquarium in California, there was a sea otter who was a mother for rescued pups. She taught them how to look for crabs and open clam shells.
Sea Otter Rescue by Suzi Eszterhas
This book invites readers inside the Alaska Sea Life Center on the shores of Resurrection Bay in the town of Seward, Alaska. It explores how sea otters become orphaned or hurt and the process of healing and rehabilitating them. It also highlights the people who work at the clinic and how they aid the animals.
Odder by Katherine Applegate
A delightful, feel-good picture book about a brave otter who creates a special family when life gets turned upside down. Based on the bestselling verse novel by Katherine Applegate.Odder spends her days playing underwater and learning from her mother. But Odder's life takes a dramatic turn when a storm hits, and she is rescued by humans.
The Otter Who Wanted to Know by Jill Tomlinson (short novel for early readers) Pat is an adorable little sea otter. She likes turning up her toes and floating in the sea, chasing fish and asking a hundred and one questions. One day Pat's quiet life is turned upside down when she gets caught up in a pretty scary adventure. Suddenly she doesn't have time to ask any questions, and even if she did, no one would know the answers. This time Pat just has to find things out for herself!