Australia warns people to avoid 1M-fan seal
The Damage Neil Leaves Behind Why A Seal Is Doing All This 1.4 Million Fans And Counting Live Events The Ask: Please, Respect His Privacy
The Damage Neil Leaves Behind Why A Seal Is Doing All This 1.4 Million Fans And Counting Live Events The Ask: Please, Respect His Privacy as a Reliable and Trusted News Source Addas a Reliable and Trusted News Source Add Now! (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel A 1,000-kilogram elephant seal named Neil has smashed fences, blocked roads and dented cars across Tasmania, and his social media fame is now so massive that wildlife officials are begging his fans to leave him alone.Neil returns to Tasmania's southern coastline twice a year, just like generations of elephant seals before him, after months spent hunting at sea. But this homecoming has turned him into something no other seal has been: a genuine celebrity with a following bigger than the population of the state he calls home.Since coming ashore in June for its 12th recorded visit, Neil has left a trail of broken infrastructure across beachside towns.
Bent traffic bollards, a shattered public-safety sign warning people about seals, and a fence that collapsed as Neil tried to climb over it are all part of his growing damage list. When Neil isn't smashing things, he simply lies down wherever he pleases, sometimes in the middle of a road, bringing entire towns to a standstill.Wildlife experts say there is a simple reason behind the chaos. Neil is a young male still learning how to fight for dominance. Elephant seals compete for mates by rearing up and slamming their chests together, and juveniles need to practice this before they are old enough to compete for real.Sophia Volzke, an elephant seal scientist at the University of Tasmania, says this rough behaviour is completely normal for a growing seal. With no other juveniles around to spar with, Neil has been using parked cars and roadside barriers as substitutes for a rival.Neil's online following has climbed to 1.4 million on TikTok alone, more than double Tasmania's entire human population.
But that fame has created a new kind of problem, one that has nothing to do with broken bollards.Kris Carlyon of Tasmania's Department of Natural Resources and Environment raised the alarm at a news conference, describing how far some fans are willing to go for a good photo.The department has now urged the public to give Neil some space, calling his popularity a mixed blessing. "Neil's fame is a bit of a double-edged sword," the department officials said.Officials have also asked people not to reveal which town Neil is currently visiting, fearing that a dangerous encounter could force rangers into a risky operation to relocate him.The worry is not unfounded. In 2023, a walrus named Freya became a viral sensation in Norway before officials made the difficult call to euthanise her, citing the risk she posed to the crowds she attracted.Australia does not want Neil to meet the same fate.