ringed seal (Pusa hispida saimensis) is an endangered subspecies endemic to Lake Saimaa in Eastern Finland. The population has been increasing in recent decades due to various conservation measures (Kunnasranta et al., 2021) and is nowadays around 440 individuals (Metsähallitus, 2022). The biggest threats are by-catch, small population size, disturbance, and climate change (Kunnasranta et al., 2021). During the open-water season, seals haul out and rest on terrestrial platforms, although they can also rest in water (Kunnasranta et al., 2002). However, haul out while sleeping may reduce metabolic costs, as seen in harbor seals (Phoca vitulina;Watts, 1996). During the ice-covered season in winter, Saimaa ringed seals dig lairs in snow drifts that accumulate on the shorelines of islands and islets (Sipilä, 2003). These snowlairs are used for giving birth and nursing as well as for haul-out. As with all other ringed seals, Saimaa ringed seals undergo annual molt during spring.However, unlike with ringed seals in the Arctic that typically molt on ice (Smith, 1973), the peak of the molt in Lake Saimaa takes place on terrestrial platforms after the ice breaks (Niemi et al., 2022)