An Inuk hunter's shocking discovery: A 1-headed, 2-bodied seal fetus - Action News
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An Inuk hunter's shocking discovery: A 1-headed, 2-bodied seal fetus

Aibillie Elijassiapik, an Inuk hunter in Northern Quebec, found a rare conjoined seal fetus this week.

WARNING: This story contains graphic photos of seals

Aibillie Elijassiapik was out hunting seals near Inukjuak, Que., when he discovered an unusual seal fetus. (Submitted by Aibillie Elijassiapik )

Aibillie Elijassiapik was out hunting seals near Inukjuak, Que., when he noticed his catch had an abnormally protruding belly.

He assumed the seal was pregnant,and pregnant itwas but what he found inits womb was what he called, in Inuktitut,a total surprise.

He began to skin the ringed seal a normal hunting procedure. That quickly took an unexpected turn.

"I noticed in the uterus two sets of flippers, so I was expecting to pull out two seal pups," said Elijassiapik, who said it's rare for a seal to give birth to two seal pups.

"In fact, it was only one conjoined seal pup at the head."

Elijassiapik, who hasbeen hunting since his father taught him at a young age, said he hasnever seen anything like it.

Aibillie Elijassiapik found this one-headed, two-bodied ringed seal fetus near Inukjuak, Que., on Monday. (Submitted by Aibillie Elijassiapik )

2nd strange seal encounter in weeks

But this wasn't the only surprising seal abdomen Elijassiapik has seen recently.

Two weeks earlier, he found a seal who had another abnormally swollen belly. He said there was a strange lump on its stomach.

When he butchered this seal, an unusual yellow-green pus oozed out, he said.

Both of the strange sealswere left behind under the instruction of an elder of Elijassiapik's community.

'Almost heartbreaking ... mess-up of biology' says prof

"I have never seen this ever," said Sara Iverson, a professor of biology at Halifax's Dalhousie Universitywho specializes in marine mammals.

She has studied reproduction inseals for 36 years.

"It's almost heartbreaking in a sense because it's such a mess-up of biology," said Iverson."But in another sense, it's just fascinating."

Looking at the photos sent to her by CBC News, Iverson described the twins as almost neck and neck, chins attached together, and noted that the two sets of bodies were separate right beneath the abdomen.

"God that is just amazing," she said.

This might be the first-ever reported case of a conjoined ringed seal fetus in the world, according to Dalhousie professor Sara Iverson. (Submitted by Aibillie Elijassiapik )

At first glance, Iverson said the specimen was a conjoined twin fetus, a rare phenomenon.

She saidthere's too little information to speculate on the cause of the malformation, but some theories include errors in cellular division, genetic defects, environmental factors, or a combination of the above. One way twins conjoin is through a process called fetus in fetu, where a dominant twin absorbs in the other, said Iverson.

"But I would say, if stuff like this was found again, it would be really important to save the specimen, get them in a freezerand ship it to an animal pathologist," she said.

Shesaidthere are only a handful of reports of this birth defect in seals around the world.

"This might be the first-ever report in ringed seals,"saidIverson.

Conjoined harbour seal fetus in the U.S. in 2013

But there was a report of a conjoined seal fetus in the U.S. in 2013. A harbour seal a more common type of sealfound across the Northern Hemisphere died on the shores of Olga, Wash., giving birth to the conjoined fetus.

A conjoined harbour seal fetus found in 2013 in Washington state. (Conjoined Fetal Twins in a Harbor Seal (Phoca vitulina), Journal of Wildlife Diseases 2016)

"The cause of this unique anomaly a first for this species was not identified," statesa 2016 journal article in the Journal of Wildlife Diseases.

Iverson said the ringed seal carrying the recently discovered conjoined seal fetus would have either had a stillbirth ordied giving birth.

With files from Qavavao Peter