National Geographic Kids: Sea Otters
National Geographic Kids

Learn about sea otters with National Geographic Kids.

Explore.org: Naknek River (Katmai National Park)
Explore.org

This live cam overlooks Naknek River in King Salmon, Alaska, just outside Katmai National Park and Preserve.

Explore.org: Homosassa Springs Underwater Manatees (Ellie Schiller Homosassa Springs Wildlife Sta...
Explore.org

This underwater camera dives into Homosassa Springs to open a window into the crystal-clear Florida water where Florida’s most beloved aquatic mammal, the West Indian manatee, swims with a jubilee of fish through crystal-clear water.  

Explore.org: Homosassa Springs Above Water Manatees (Ellie Schiller Homosassa Springs Wildlife St...
Explore.org

Discover what’s been called “the most beautiful river and springs in the world” and a sanctuary for manatees and an astounding number of fresh and saltwater fish.

Explore.org: Rubbing Beach Underwater Orcas (British Columbia, Canada)
Explore.org

This live underwater cam shows extraordinary below-the-surface views of the “rubbing” behavior unique to the orcas here in British Columbia’s Johnstone Strait at Blackfish Sound.

Explore.org: Beluga Boat - Above Deck (Manitoba, Canada)
Explore.org

Take a tour of the Churchill River Estuary in Manitoba, Canada, aboard the Beluga Boat!

Explore.org: Beluga Boat - Underwater (Manitoba, Canada)
Explore.org

Every summer, approximately 57,000 beluga whales travel from the Arctic to the warmer waters of Manitoba’s Churchill River.

Explore.org: Above Water Manatee Cam (Blue Spring State Park)
Explore.org

This camera shows the lower/mid spring run at Blue Spring State Park where manatees congregate during the winter months when the river temperature in the adjacent St. John’s River drops below the temperature of the spring.

Explore.org: Rubbing Beach Orca Lookout (British Columbia, Canada)
Explore.org

Welcome to the Northern Resident orcas’ historic rubbing beaches in the Robson Bight Ecological Reserve, Johnstone Strait, BC.

Explore.org: Gray Seal Pupping (Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge)
Explore.org

This live cam overlooks the pupping beach on Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge–the second largest of just four gray seal colonies in the U.S.!