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$71.50
each
Personalised cute and playful Australian Fur Seal Metal Lunch Box
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Personalise this template
Colour
Light Blue
About Metal Lunchboxes
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About This Design
Personalised cute and playful Australian Fur Seal Metal Lunch Box
Fur seals are the cutest and curious animals. And they are incredibly playful. This unique metal lunch box features a photo taken while swimming with the fur seals around Tasman Island in Tasmania, Australia. You can personalize it with your own name or text. Or, if you just want to enjoy the photo, you can delete the text. This is also a perfect gift idea for any child, boy, girl, adult or animal lover alike. It'll definitely brighten up your day and get you through your school or working day!
The Australian Fur Seal (Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus) is the largest fur seal found in Australian waters. Fur seals have large eyes, a pointed face with whiskers and sharp teeth. The Australian Fur Seal, Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus, is the largest of all the fur seals. It has a broad head, pointed snout and long backward sweeping facial vibrissae (whiskers). The body is robust and covered in thick brown layered hair except on the front and back flippers. The Australian Fur Seal is sexually dimorphic (males and females are visibly different). The males are larger than the females and when mature carry a dark mane of coarse hair. They have a set of carnivore-like teeth similar to those of a large dog or bear. Like all members of the Family Otariidae (Fur seals and sea lions) they can raise their body onto their front flippers to move around on land. Australian Fur Seals frequent coastal waters and oceans. Their preferred habitat especially for breeding is rocky islands, which include boulder or pebble beaches and gradually sloping rocky ledges. The Australian Fur Seal has a relatively restricted distribution around the islands of Bass Strait, parts of Tasmania and southern Victoria. They can be seen hauling out (coming ashore) on islands off South Australia and areas of southern New South Wales such as Montague Island with the occasional animal appearing as far north as the mid north coast of New South Wales. As it is closely related to the South African Fur Seal, its populations worldwide are reasonable secure although it is occasionally commercially hunted in South Africa. In Australia it is fully protected although its numbers are probably still only half those of the historic pre sealing days. It continues to be vulnerable to disturbance at its breeding sites and suffers some loses as a result of conflict with commercial fishing operations. Australian Fur Seals feed on a variety of bony fish species plus squid and octopus. They are voracious and skilful hunters in the water and are not adverse to taking advantage of situations where fish are corralled by nets and fish farms. With its streamlined shape and strong flippers, the Australian Fur Seal is an agile swimmer and can dive to depths of 200 m to catch fishes and squids. Despite its cumbersome appearance, it is also quite mobile on land, even over rocky terrain. Fur seals differ from other seals (true seals) because they have external ears and the ability to use all four limbs to move across land. Also, fur seals have two layers of fur while other seals have only one layer. Australian Fur Seals come ashore each year and form breeding colonies. The adult males come ashore first and establish territories. Females congregate within these areas and are defended by the resident male often with considerable aggression towards the females and other males. Females spend most of the gestation period at sea, coming ashore just before the birth of a single pup (sometimes two) between October and December. Females generally mate again 6 - 10 days later. The Australian Fur Seal has what is referred to as 'delayed implantation', which means the fertilised egg remains dormant for some time before implanting and resuming development. This ensures that the pups will always be born in summer when chances of survival are highest because of the warmer weather and abundant food supply. The pup population suffers a high mortality rate in those first two months of life especially when the mothers are away at sea feeding. Pups are weaned at four to six months old but may still remain with the mother for a further six months or more. During the 1800s the Australian Fur Seal was heavily hunted for its coat and the population dropped from several hundred thousand to only 20,000. Entanglement in discarded fishing gear is also a threat. All Australian marine mammals are protected and the Australian Fur Seal population is making a recovery.
Customer Reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars rating68 Total Reviews
68 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By ROSE M.18 May 2024 • Verified Purchase
Stainless
It is the talk at my dogs daycare. Great design very bold
4 out of 5 stars rating
By H.19 November 2018 • Verified Purchase
Stainless
Zazzle Reviewer Program
This is a standard metal lunchbox that appears to work just fine. We designed this box ourselves with an uploaded photo and custom text on the front and back. It looks absolutely beautiful except the front of the lunchbox is not centered like it shows in the photo. The print borders don't align with the inset flat part of the box where the preview photo online showed it perfectly centered in there. The back looks nice and centered though.
from zazzle.com (US)
5 out of 5 stars rating
By Hugh W.10 March 2019 • Verified Purchase
White
Zazzle Reviewer Program
I'd been experimenting with transferring designs to other products when my wife noticed this old time metal lunchbox. I knew she wanted it thus I created a special one just for here with a couple of her favorite photos I'd taken. Excellent. The cloud image on the front is her favorite of the two. It was taken right off our back patio. The other image was in West Texas several years ago, wide open spaces and roads.
from zazzle.com (US)
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Product ID: 256402079391650425
Added on 27/9/19, 9:44 pm
Rating: G
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