Alaska’s northern fur seals find refuge on tip of volcano

This August 2019 photo released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries (NOAA) shows steam from volcanic vents rising on Bogoslof Island, Alaska. Alaska’s northern fur seals are thriving on an island that’s the tip of an active undersea volcano. Numbers of fur seals continue to grow on tiny Bogoslof Island despite hot mud, steam and sulfurous gases spitting from vents on the volcano. (Maggie Mooney-Seus/NOAA Fisheries via AP)

This August 2019 photo released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries (NOAA) shows mud shooting upward from the openings near a volcano on Bogoslof Island, Alaska. Alaska’s northern fur seals are thriving on an island that’s the tip of an active undersea volcano. Numbers of fur seals continue to grow on tiny Bogoslof Island despite hot mud, steam and sulfurous gases spitting from vents on the volcano. (Maggie Mooney-Seus/NOAA Fisheries via AP)

This August 2019 photo released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries (NOAA) shows a mature northern fur seal standing on a beach on Bogoslof Island, Alaska. Alaska’s northern fur seals are thriving on an island that’s the tip of an active undersea volcano. Numbers of fur seals continue to grow on tiny Bogoslof Island despite hot mud, steam and sulfurous gases spitting from vents on the volcano. (Maggie Mooney-Seus/NOAA Fisheries via AP)

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska’s northern fur seal population for three decades has been classified as depleted, but the marine mammals are showing up in growing numbers at an unlikely location — a tiny island that forms the tip of an active undersea volcano.

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