Neil the seal wreaks havoc as experts warn of ‘loving him to death’

The state’s favourite elephant seal could be in danger of being euthanised.

Lauren Thomson
7NEWS
Neil the Seal is a one-tonne elephant seal born in southern Tasmania in 2020 who returns annually for his winter moult at Pelican Point in Longley.

Neil the seal is back — and the one‑tonne southern elephant seal is once again causing chaos across southern Tasmania, crushing fences, blocking roads and even smashing into parked cars in what experts describe as play‑fighting behaviour.

The five‑year‑old seal has taken up residence in several towns in recent days, ignoring barricades and traffic cones as he hauls out on roads and driveways.

Locals have watched him flop over fences, nudge LandCruisers and settle himself in puddles surrounded by bollards, treating everyday objects as stand‑ins for the seal colony he doesn’t have.

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Kris Carlyon from the Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania says Neil’s behaviour is a direct result of isolation.

“He’s got no other seals to play with, to joust with, to test his own strength with like he would be doing normally,” Carlyon said.

“So he chooses things to interact with — and he’s obviously decided that this puddle surrounded by bollards, which are horizontal at the moment, is the thing he wants to engage with.”

Neil has been turned into a social media celebrity
Neil has been turned into a social media celebrity Credit: Instagram

Male elephant seals like Neil spend their early years developing the behaviours they’ll need to compete for territory and mates. That includes play‑fighting, jousting and testing strength — usually with other seals.

In Tasmania, Neil has no colony to interact with, so he redirects that instinct toward whatever objects he can find.

Attention helps — and harms

Neil’s fame has exploded online, with crowds gathering whenever he appears. Carlyon says that attention is a double‑edged sword.

“Right now the attention Neil gets helps with the awareness of our threatened species, helps with his protection in some ways,” he said.

“But it also encourages perhaps risky human behaviour. If unmanaged, that attention can result in injury to both Neil or to the public. It can push him into unnatural habitats, and ultimately threaten his survival as a wild animal.”

Carlyon says he and his colleagues have been “pretty honest” about the risk.

“There is a risk here of essentially loving Neil to death.”

Neil the seal causes traffic chaos in Tasmania.
Neil the seal causes traffic chaos in Tasmania. Credit: 7NEWS

Southern elephant seals belong to the pinniped family — the group of flippered marine mammals that includes seals, sea lions and walruses. Pinnipeds are built for life in the water, with powerful flippers, thick blubber for insulation and streamlined bodies that let them dive deep and stay submerged for long periods. They haul out on land to rest, breed, moult and escape predators, which is why animals like Neil periodically appear in coastal towns.

Neil was born on the Tasman Peninsula in 2020. Authorities believe his mother got lost on her way to the Macquarie Island elephant seal colony, about 1500km away.

A warning from overseas

Officials point to the case of Freya, the walrus that became famous in Norway in 2022. Despite repeated warnings, crowds continued approaching her. Authorities eventually euthanised Freya after concluding that people repeatedly putting themselves in danger left no safe alternative.

A one‑tonne teenager

Neil is estimated to weigh around 1000kg, and experts say his behaviour mirrors that of an unruly teenager — energetic, curious and testing boundaries.

He is only roughly one third of the size he is expected to grow to.

Bollards, fences, traffic cones and even parked cars “stand little chance” against him, Carlyon says, because Neil is simply doing what young male elephant seals do: play‑fighting, exploring and seeking interaction.

With no colony in Tasmania, he’s improvising.

Neil the seal’s presence on beaches and suburban streets in Tasmania draws thousands of spectators.
Neil the seal’s presence on beaches and suburban streets in Tasmania draws thousands of spectators. Credit: AAP

Southern elephant seals are the largest seals on the planet, with adult males reaching up to 4 metres in length and tipping the scales at 3,000 to 4,000 kilograms.

Even subadults like Neil — at around 1,000kg — carry enormous strength, and their movements can easily crush fences, vehicles or infrastructure without intent or aggression.

The public is being told to keep their distance from Neil for their own safety and his, and not to share his location on social media.

Originally published on 7NEWS

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