A Mammal
20-60
The Caribbean monk seal, West Indian seal (Monachus tropicalis), or sea wolf, as early explorers referred to it, was a species of seal native to the Caribbean and now believed to be extinct. The Caribbean monk seals' main predators were sharks and humans. Overhunting of the seals for oil, and overfishing of their food sources, are the established reasons for the seals' extinction. The last confirmed sighting of the Caribbean Monk Seal was in 1952 at Serranilla, between Jamaica and Nicaragua.
There are old fossils of them that people have found.
They survive by eating fish, giving birth in caves rather than on open beaches and by just generally staying away from humans if at all possible. There are three species of monk seal. The Mediterranean Monk Seal and the Hawaiian Monk Seal are both critically endangered. The Caribbean Monk Seal is extinct. The biggest problem that the Mediterranean and Hawaiian Monk Seals face is humans.
Unfortunately, there are none anymore. The Caribbean monk seal (Monachus tropicalis) was hunted to extinction. The last confirmed sighting was in 1952.
you people are so right what did they eat? they ate fish lobsters octopus and eels
It lived in the Caribbean sea and Gulf of Mexico
Monk seal = Kila Hawaiʻi
The Monk Seal is critically endangered.
Monk seal = Kila Hawaiʻi
June 9 th 2008 although the last confirmed sighting in the wild was 1952