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Manatee

Manatees (family Trichechidae, genus Trichechus) are large, fully aquatic, mostly herbivorous marine mammals sometimes known as sea cows. There are three accepted living species of Trichechidae, representing three of the four living species in the order Sirenia: the Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis), the West Indian manatee (Trichechus manatus), and the West African manatee (Trichechus senegalensis). They measure up to 4.0 metres (13 ft 1 in) long, weigh as much as 590 kilograms (1,300 lb),[2] and have paddle-like tails.

Manatees
Temporal range: Early PleistoceneRecent
2.5–0 Ma[1]
Clockwise from upper left: West Indian manatee, Amazonian manatee, African manatee
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Sirenia
Family: Trichechidae
Subfamily: Trichechinae
Genus: Trichechus
Linnaeus 1758
Type species
Trichechus manatus
Linnaeus, 1758
Species
Synonyms
  • Halipaedisca Gistel 1848
  • Manatus Brunnich 1772
  • Neodermus Rafinesque 1815
  • Oxystomus Fischer von Waldheim 1803

Manatees are herbivores and eat over 60 different freshwater and saltwater plants. Manatees inhabit the shallow, marshy coastal areas and rivers of the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, the Amazon basin, and West Africa.

The main causes of death for manatees are human-related issues, such as habitat destruction and human objects. Their slow-moving, curious nature has led to violent collisions with propeller-driven boats and ships. Some manatees have been found with over 50 scars on them from propeller blades. Natural causes of death include adverse temperatures, predation by crocodiles on young, and disease.

Etymology

The etymology of the name is unclear, with connections having been made to Latin manus "hand" and to pre-Columbian Taíno manati "breast".[3] The term sea cow is a reference to the species' slow, peaceful, herbivorous nature, reminiscent of that of bovines.[4]

Taxonomy

Manatees are three of the four living species in the order Sirenia. The fourth is the Eastern Hemisphere's dugong. The Sirenia are thought to have evolved from four-legged land mammals more than 60 million years ago, with the closest living relatives being the Proboscidea (elephants) and Hyracoidea (hyraxes).[5]

Description

 
A skeleton of a manatee and calf, the Museum of Osteology, Oklahoma City
 
Skull of a West Indian manatee, the Museum of Osteology, Oklahoma City

Manatees weigh 400 to 550 kg (880 to 1,210 lb), and average 2.8 to 3.0 m (9 ft 2 in to 9 ft 10 in) in length, sometimes growing to 4.6 m (15 ft 1 in) and 1,775 kg (3,913 lb) and females tend to be larger and heavier than males. At birth, baby manatees weigh about 30 kg (66 lb) each. The female manatee has two teats, one under each flipper,[6] a characteristic that was used to make early links between the manatee and elephants.

The lids of manatees' small, widely spaced eyes close in a circular manner. The manatee has a large, flexible, prehensile upper lip, used to gather food and eat and for social interaction and communication. Manatees have shorter snouts than their fellow sirenians, the dugongs.

Manatee adults have no incisor or canine teeth, just a set of cheek teeth, which are not clearly differentiated into molars and premolars. These teeth are repeatedly replaced throughout life, with new teeth growing at the rear as older teeth fall out from farther forward in the mouth, somewhat as elephants' teeth do.[7][8] At any time, a manatee typically has no more than six teeth in each jaw of its mouth.[8]

The manatee's tail is paddle-shaped, and is the clearest visible difference between manatees and dugongs; a dugong tail is fluked, similar in shape to that of a whale.

The manatee is unusual among mammals in having just six cervical vertebrae,[9] a number that may be due to mutations in the homeotic genes.[10] All other mammals have seven cervical vertebrae,[11] other than the two-toed and three-toed sloths.

Like the horse, the manatee has a simple stomach, but a large cecum, in which it can digest tough plant matter. Generally, the intestines are about 45 meters, unusually long for an animal of the manatee's size.[12]

Evolution

Fossil remains of manatee ancestors - also known as sirenians - date back to the Early Eocene.[13][14] It is thought that they reached the isolated area of the South American continent and became known as Trichechidae. In the Late Miocene, trichechids were likely restricted in South American coastal rivers and they fed on many freshwater plants. Dugongs inhabited the West Atlantic and Caribbean waters and fed on seagrass meadows instead. As the sea grasses began to grow, manatees adapted to the changing environment by growing supernumerary molars. Sea levels lowered and increased erosion and silt runoff was caused by glaciation. This increased the tooth wear of the bottom-feeding manatees.[15]

Behavior

 
Endangered Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus)

Apart from mothers with their young, or males following a receptive female, manatees are generally solitary animals.[8] Manatees spend approximately 50% of the day sleeping submerged, surfacing for air regularly at intervals of less than 20 minutes. The remainder of the time is mostly spent grazing in shallow waters at depths of 1–2 m (3 ft 3 in – 6 ft 7 in). The Florida subspecies (T. m. latirostris) has been known to live up to 60 years.

Locomotion

Generally, manatees swim at about 5 to 8 km/h (3 to 5 mph). However, they have been known to swim at up to 30 km/h (20 mph) in short bursts.[16]

Intelligence and learning

 
Manatee postures in captivity

Manatees are capable of understanding discrimination tasks and show signs of complex associative learning. They also have good long-term memory.[17] They demonstrate discrimination and task-learning abilities similar to dolphins and pinnipeds in acoustic and visual studies.[18] Social interactions between manatees are highly complex and intricate, which may indicate higher intelligence than previously thought, although they remain poorly understood by science.[19]

Reproduction

Manatees typically breed once every two years; generally only a single calf is born. Gestation lasts about 12 months and to wean the calf takes a further 12 to 18 months,[8] although females may have more than one estrous cycle per year.[20]

Communication

Manatees emit a wide range of sounds used in communication, especially between cows and their calves.[21] Their ears are large internally but the external openings are small, and they are located four inches behind each eye.[22] Adults communicate to maintain contact and during sexual and play behaviors. Taste and smell, in addition to sight, sound, and touch, may also be forms of communication.[23]

Diet

Manatees are herbivores and eat over 60 different freshwater (e.g., floating hyacinth, pickerel weed, alligator weed, water lettuce, hydrilla, water celery, musk grass, mangrove leaves) and saltwater plants (e.g., sea grasses, shoal grass, manatee grass, turtle grass, widgeon grass, sea clover, and marine algae).[24][25] Using their divided upper lip, an adult manatee will commonly eat up to 10%–15% of their body weight (about 50 kg) per day. Consuming such an amount requires the manatee to graze for up to seven hours a day.[26] To be able to cope with the high levels of cellulose in their plant based diet, manatees utilize hindgut fermentation to help with the digestion process.[27] Manatees have been known to eat small numbers of fish from nets.[28]

Feeding behavior

 
Manatee plate

Manatees use their flippers to "walk" along the bottom whilst they dig for plants and roots in the substrate. When plants are detected, the flippers are used to scoop the vegetation toward the manatee's lips. The manatee has prehensile lips; the upper lip pad is split into left and right sides which can move independently. The lips use seven muscles to manipulate and tear at plants. Manatees use their lips and front flippers to move the plants into the mouth. The manatee does not have front teeth, however, behind the lips, on the roof of the mouth, there are dense, ridged pads. These horny ridges, and the manatee's lower jaw, tear through ingested plant material.[26]

Dentition

Manatees have four rows of teeth. There are 6 to 8 high-crowned, open-rooted molars located along each side of the upper and lower jaw giving a total of 24 to 32 flat, rough-textured teeth. Eating gritty vegetation abrades the teeth, particularly the enamel crown; however, research indicates that the enamel structure in manatee molars is weak. To compensate for this, manatee teeth are continually replaced. When anterior molars wear down, they are shed. Posterior molars erupt at the back of the row and slowly move forward to replace these like enamel crowns on a conveyor belt, similarly to elephants. This process continues throughout the manatee's lifetime. The rate at which the teeth migrate forward depends on how quickly the anterior teeth abrade. Some studies indicate that the rate is about 1 cm/month although other studies indicate 0.1 cm/month.[26]

Ecology

Range and habitat

 
Approximate distribution of Trichechus; T. manatus in green; T. inunguis in red; T. senegalensis in orange
 
Three manatees
 
Mother manatee and calf

Manatees inhabit the shallow, marshy coastal areas and rivers of the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico (T. manatus, West Indian manatee), the Amazon basin (T. inunguis, Amazonian manatee), and West Africa (T. senegalensis, West African manatee).[29]

West Indian manatees prefer warmer temperatures and are known to congregate in shallow waters. They frequently migrate through brackish water estuaries to freshwater springs. They cannot survive below 15 °C (60 °F). Their natural source for warmth during winter is warm, spring-fed rivers.

West Indian

The coast of the state of Georgia is usually the northernmost range of the West Indian manatees because their low metabolic rate does not protect them in cold water. Prolonged exposure to water below 20 °C (68 °F) can cause "cold stress syndrome" and death.[30]

Florida manatees can move freely between fresh water and salt water.

Manatees have been seen as far north as Cape Cod, and in 1995[31] and again in 2006, one was seen in New York City[32] and Rhode Island's Narragansett Bay. A manatee was spotted in the Wolf River harbor near the Mississippi River in downtown Memphis in 2006, and was later found dead 16 km (10 mi) downriver in McKellar Lake.[33] Another manatee was found dead on a New Jersey beach in February 2020, considered especially unusual given the time of year.[34] At the time of the manatee's discovery, the water temperature in the area was below 6.5 °C (43.7 °F).[35]

The West Indian manatee migrates into Florida rivers—such as the Crystal, the Homosassa, and the Chassahowitzka rivers, whose headsprings are 22 °C (72 °F) all year. Between November and March each year, about 600 West Indian manatees gather in the rivers in Citrus County, Florida such as the Crystal River National Wildlife Refuge.[36]

In winter, manatees often gather near the warm-water outflows of power plants along the Florida coast, instead of migrating south as they once did. Some conservationists are concerned that these manatees have become too reliant on these artificially warmed areas.[37] The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is trying to find a new way to heat the water for manatees that depended on plants that have closed.[citation needed]

Studies suggest that Florida manatees need access to fresh water for proper regulation of water and salts in their bodies.[citation needed]

Accurate population estimates of the West Indian manatee in Florida are difficult. They have been called scientifically weak[38] because they vary widely from year to year, with most areas showing decreases, and little strong evidence of increases except in two areas. Manatee counts are highly variable without an accurate way to estimate numbers. In Florida in 1996, a winter survey found 2,639 manatees; in 1997, a January survey found 2,229, and a February survey found 1,706.[18] A statewide synoptic survey in January 2010 found 5,067 manatees living in Florida, the highest number recorded to that time.[39]

As of January 2016, the USFWS estimates the range-wide West Indian manatee population to be at least 13,000; as of January 2018, at least 6,100 are estimated to be in Florida.[40][41]

Population viability studies conducted in 1997 found that decreasing adult survival and eventual extinction were probable future outcomes for Florida manatees unless they received more protection.[42] The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed downgrading the manatee's status from endangered to threatened in January 2016 after more than 40 years.[43]

Amazonian

The freshwater Amazonian manatee (T. inunguis) inhabits the Central Amazon Basin in Brazil, eastern Perú, southeastern Colombia, but not Ecuador. It is the only exclusively freshwater manatee, and is also the smallest. Since they are unable to reduce peripheral heat loss, it is found primarily in tropical waters.[44]

West African

They are found in coastal marine and estuarine habitats, and in freshwater river systems along the west coast of Africa from the Senegal River south to the Cuanza River in Angola. They live as far upriver on the Niger River as Koulikoro in Mali, 2,000 km (1,200 mi) from the coast.[45]

Predation

In relation to the threat posed by humans, predation does not present a significant threat to manatees.[13] When threatened, the manatee's response is to dive as deeply as it can, suggesting that threats have most frequently come from land dwellers such as humans rather than from other water-dwelling creatures such as caimans or sharks.[13]

Relation to humans

 
Young manatees can be curious; this individual is inspecting a kayak
 
Antillean manatee

Threats

The main causes of death for manatees are human-related issues, such as habitat destruction and human objects. Natural causes of death include adverse temperatures, predation by crocodiles on young, and disease.[46]

Ship strikes

Their slow-moving, curious nature, coupled with dense coastal development, has led to many violent collisions with propeller-driven boats and ships, leading frequently to maiming, disfigurement, and even death. As a result, a large proportion of manatees exhibit spiral cutting propeller scars on their backs, usually caused by larger vessels that do not have skegs in front of the propellers like the smaller outboard and inboard-outboard recreational boats have. They are now even identified by humans based on their scar patterns. Many manatees have been cut in two by large vessels like ships and tug boats, even in the highly populated lower St. Johns River's narrow channels. Some are concerned that the current situation is inhumane, with upwards of 50 scars and disfigurements from vessel strikes on a single manatee.[47] Often, the lacerations lead to infections, which can prove fatal. Internal injuries stemming from being trapped between hulls and docks and impacts have also been fatal. Recent testing[citation needed] shows that manatees may be able to hear speed boats and other watercraft approaching, due to the frequency the boat makes. However, a manatee may not be able to hear the approaching boats when they are performing day-to-day activities or distractions. The manatee has a tested frequency range of 8 to 32 kilohertz.[48]

Manatees hear on a higher frequency than would be expected for such large marine mammals. Many large boats emit very low frequencies, which confuse the manatee and explain their lack of awareness around boats. The Lloyd's mirror effect results in low frequency propeller sounds not being discernible near the surface, where most accidents occur. Research indicates that when a boat has a higher frequency the manatees rapidly swim away from danger.[49]

In 2003, a population model was released by the United States Geological Survey that predicted an extremely grave situation confronting the manatee in both the Southwest and Atlantic regions where the vast majority of manatees are found. It states,

In the absence of any new management action, that is, if boat mortality rates continue to increase at the rates observed since 1992, the situation in the Atlantic and Southwest regions is dire, with no chance of meeting recovery criteria within 100 years.[50] "Hurricanes, cold stress, red tide poisoning and a variety of other maladies threaten manatees, but by far their greatest danger is from watercraft strikes, which account for about a quarter of Florida manatee deaths," said study curator John Jett.[51]

According to marine mammal veterinarians:

 
Manatee bearing scars on its back from a boat propeller.

The severity of mutilations for some of these individuals can be astounding – including long term survivors with completely severed tails, major tail mutilations, and multiple disfiguring dorsal lacerations. These injuries not only cause gruesome wounds, but may also impact population processes by reducing calf production (and survival) in wounded females – observations also speak to the likely pain and suffering endured.[18] In an example, they cited one case study of a small calf "with a severe dorsal mutilation trailing a decomposing piece of dermis and muscle as it continued to accompany and nurse from its mother ... by age 2 its dorsum was grossly deformed and included a large protruding rib fragment visible."[18]

These veterinarians go on to state:

[T]he overwhelming documentation of gruesome wounding of manatees leaves no room for denial. Minimization of this injury is explicit in the Recovery Plan, several state statutes, and federal laws, and implicit in our society's ethical and moral standards.[18]

One quarter of annual manatee deaths in Florida are caused by boat collisions with manatees.[52] In 2009, of the 429 Florida manatees recorded dead, 97 were killed by commercial and recreational vessels, which broke the earlier record number of 95 set in 2002.[53][54]

Red tide

Another cause of manatee deaths are red tides, a term used for the proliferation, or "blooms", of the microscopic marine algae Karenia brevis. This dinoflagellate produces brevetoxins that can have toxic effects on the central nervous system of animals.[55]

In 1996, a red tide was responsible for 151 manatee deaths in Florida.[56] The bloom was present from early March to the end of April and killed approximately 15% of the known population of manatees along South Florida's western coast.[57] Other blooms in 1982 and 2005 resulted in 37 and 44 deaths, respectively.[58]

Starvation

In 2021 a massive die-off of seagrass along the Atlantic coast of Florida left manatees without enough food to eat. As a result of this ecological disaster Florida's manatees began dying at an alarming rate, largely from starvation.[59] In early 2022 the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service began a feeding program to address the situation by distributing 3,000 pounds (1,361 kg) of lettuce per day to save the malnourished animals.[60]

Additional threats

Manatees can also be crushed and isolated in water control structures (navigation locks, floodgates, etc.) and are occasionally killed by entanglement in fishing gear, such as crab pot float lines, box traps, and shark nets.[45]

While humans are allowed to swim with manatees in one area of Florida,[61] there have been numerous charges of people harassing and disturbing the manatees.[62] According to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, approximately 99 manatee deaths each year are related to human activities.[63] In January 2016, there were 43 manatee deaths in Florida alone.[64]

Conservation

All three species of manatee are listed by the World Conservation Union as vulnerable to extinction. However, The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) does not consider the West Indian manatee to be "endangered" anymore, having downgraded its status to "threatened" as of March 2017. They cite improvements to habitat conditions, population growth and reductions of threats as reasoning for the change. The reclassification was met with controversy, with Florida congressman Vern Buchanan and groups such as the Save the Manatee Club and the Center for Biological Diversity expressing concerns that the change would have a detrimental effect on conservation efforts.[65] The new classification will not affect current federal protections.[40] West Indian manatees were originally classified as endangered with the 1967 class of endangered species.[66]

Manatee population in the United States reached a low in the 1970s, during which only a few hundred individuals lived in the nation.[67] As of February 2016, 6,250 manatees were reported swimming in Florida's springs.[68] It is illegal under federal and Florida law to injure or harm a manatee.

There are many conservation programs that have been created to help manatees. Save the Manatee Club is a non-profit group and membership organization that works to protect manatees and their aquatic ecosystems. Founded by Bob Graham, former Florida governor, and singer/songwriter Jimmy Buffett, this is today's leading manatee conservation club.[69][self-published source?]

The MV Freedom Star and MV Liberty Star, ships used by NASA to tow Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters back to Kennedy Space Center, were propelled only by water jets to protect the endangered manatee population that inhabits regions of the Banana River where the ships are based.

Brazil outlawed hunting in 1973 in an effort to preserve the species. Deaths by boat strikes are still common.[70][71] Although countries are protecting Amazonian manatees in the locations where they are endangered, as of 1994 there were no enforced laws, and the manatees were still being captured throughout their range.[72]

Captivity

 
A manatee at SeaWorld, Florida

There are a number of manatee rehabilitation centers in the United States. These include three government-run critical care facilities in Florida at Lowry Park Zoo, Miami Seaquarium, and SeaWorld Orlando. After initial treatment at these facilities, the manatees are transferred to rehabilitation facilities before release. These include the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden, Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, Epcot's The Seas, South Florida Museum, and Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park.[73]

The Columbus Zoo was a founding member of the Manatee Rehabilitation Partnership in 2001. Since 1999, the zoo's Manatee Bay facility has helped rehabilitate 20 manatees.[74] The Cincinnati Zoo has rehabilitated and released more than a dozen manatees since 1999.[75]

Manatees can also be viewed in a number of European zoos, such as the Tierpark Berlin and the Nuremberg Zoo in Germany, in ZooParc de Beauval in France, the Aquarium of Genoa in Italy and the Royal Burgers' Zoo in Arnhem, the Netherlands, where manatees have parented offspring.[76] The River Safari at Singapore features seven of them.[77]

The oldest manatee in captivity was Snooty,[78] at the South Florida Museum's Parker Manatee Aquarium in Bradenton, Florida. Born at the Miami Aquarium and Tackle Company on July 21, 1948, Snooty was one of the first recorded captive manatee births. Raised entirely in captivity, Snooty was never to be released into the wild. As such he was the only manatee at the aquarium, and one of only a few captive manatees in the United States that was allowed to interact with human handlers. That made him uniquely suitable for manatee research and education.[79]

Snooty died suddenly two days after his 69th birthday, July 23, 2017, when he was found in an underwater area only used to access plumbing for the exhibit life support system. The South Florida Museum's initial press release stated, “Early indications are that an access panel door that is normally bolted shut had somehow been knocked loose and that Snooty was able to swim in.”[80]

Guyana

Since the 19th century, Georgetown, Guyana has kept West Indian manatees in its botanical garden, and later, its national park.[81] In the 1910s and again in the 1950s, sugar estates in Guyana used manatees to keep their irrigation canals weed-free.[82] Between the 1950s and 1970s, the Georgetown water treatment plant used manatees in their storage canals for the same purpose.[83]

Culture

The manatee has been linked to folklore on mermaids.[70] In West African folklore, they were considered sacred and thought to have been once human. Killing one was taboo and required penance.[84]

In the novel Moby-Dick, Herman Melville distinguishes manatees ("Lamatins", cf. lamantins) from small whales; stating, "I am aware that down to the present time, the fish styled Lamatins and Dugongs (Pig-fish and Sow-fish of the Coffins of Nantucket) are included by many naturalists among the whales. But as these pig-fish are a noisy, contemptible set, mostly lurking in the mouths of rivers, and feeding on wet hay, and especially as they do not spout, I deny their credentials as whales; and have presented them with their passports to quit the Kingdom of Cetology."[85]

A manatee called Wardell appears in the Animal Crossing: New Horizons video game. He is part of a paid downloadable content expansion, managing and selling furniture to the player.[86]

See also

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Further reading

  • Hall, Alice J. (September 1984). "Man and Manatee: Can We Live Together?". National Geographic. Vol. 166, no. 3. pp. 400–418. ISSN 0027-9358. OCLC 643483454.

External links

  • Save the Manatee
  • Murie, James On the Form and Structure of the Manatee (Manatus americanus), (1872) London, Zoological Society of London Year
  • Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission 2018-12-12 at the Wayback Machine
  • Reuters: Florida manatees may lose endangered status
  • USGS/SESC Sirenia Project

manatee, other, uses, disambiguation, family, trichechidae, genus, trichechus, large, fully, aquatic, mostly, herbivorous, marine, mammals, sometimes, known, cows, there, three, accepted, living, species, trichechidae, representing, three, four, living, specie. For other uses see Manatee disambiguation Manatees family Trichechidae genus Trichechus are large fully aquatic mostly herbivorous marine mammals sometimes known as sea cows There are three accepted living species of Trichechidae representing three of the four living species in the order Sirenia the Amazonian manatee Trichechus inunguis the West Indian manatee Trichechus manatus and the West African manatee Trichechus senegalensis They measure up to 4 0 metres 13 ft 1 in long weigh as much as 590 kilograms 1 300 lb 2 and have paddle like tails ManateesTemporal range Early Pleistocene Recent2 5 0 Ma 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Clockwise from upper left West Indian manatee Amazonian manatee African manateeScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder SireniaFamily TrichechidaeSubfamily TrichechinaeGenus TrichechusLinnaeus 1758Type speciesTrichechus manatusLinnaeus 1758SpeciesTrichechus hesperamazonicus Trichechus inunguis Trichechus manatus Trichechus senegalensis Trichechus pygmaeus validity questionable SynonymsHalipaedisca Gistel 1848 Manatus Brunnich 1772 Neodermus Rafinesque 1815 Oxystomus Fischer von Waldheim 1803Manatees are herbivores and eat over 60 different freshwater and saltwater plants Manatees inhabit the shallow marshy coastal areas and rivers of the Caribbean Sea the Gulf of Mexico the Amazon basin and West Africa The main causes of death for manatees are human related issues such as habitat destruction and human objects Their slow moving curious nature has led to violent collisions with propeller driven boats and ships Some manatees have been found with over 50 scars on them from propeller blades Natural causes of death include adverse temperatures predation by crocodiles on young and disease Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy 3 Description 3 1 Evolution 4 Behavior 4 1 Locomotion 4 2 Intelligence and learning 4 3 Reproduction 4 4 Communication 4 5 Diet 4 6 Feeding behavior 4 7 Dentition 5 Ecology 5 1 Range and habitat 5 1 1 West Indian 5 1 2 Amazonian 5 1 3 West African 5 2 Predation 6 Relation to humans 6 1 Threats 6 1 1 Ship strikes 6 1 2 Red tide 6 1 3 Starvation 6 1 4 Additional threats 6 2 Conservation 6 3 Captivity 6 3 1 Guyana 6 4 Culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEtymologyThe etymology of the name is unclear with connections having been made to Latin manus hand and to pre Columbian Taino manati breast 3 The term sea cow is a reference to the species slow peaceful herbivorous nature reminiscent of that of bovines 4 TaxonomyManatees are three of the four living species in the order Sirenia The fourth is the Eastern Hemisphere s dugong The Sirenia are thought to have evolved from four legged land mammals more than 60 million years ago with the closest living relatives being the Proboscidea elephants and Hyracoidea hyraxes 5 Description A skeleton of a manatee and calf the Museum of Osteology Oklahoma City Skull of a West Indian manatee the Museum of Osteology Oklahoma City Manatees weigh 400 to 550 kg 880 to 1 210 lb and average 2 8 to 3 0 m 9 ft 2 in to 9 ft 10 in in length sometimes growing to 4 6 m 15 ft 1 in and 1 775 kg 3 913 lb and females tend to be larger and heavier than males At birth baby manatees weigh about 30 kg 66 lb each The female manatee has two teats one under each flipper 6 a characteristic that was used to make early links between the manatee and elephants The lids of manatees small widely spaced eyes close in a circular manner The manatee has a large flexible prehensile upper lip used to gather food and eat and for social interaction and communication Manatees have shorter snouts than their fellow sirenians the dugongs Manatee adults have no incisor or canine teeth just a set of cheek teeth which are not clearly differentiated into molars and premolars These teeth are repeatedly replaced throughout life with new teeth growing at the rear as older teeth fall out from farther forward in the mouth somewhat as elephants teeth do 7 8 At any time a manatee typically has no more than six teeth in each jaw of its mouth 8 The manatee s tail is paddle shaped and is the clearest visible difference between manatees and dugongs a dugong tail is fluked similar in shape to that of a whale The manatee is unusual among mammals in having just six cervical vertebrae 9 a number that may be due to mutations in the homeotic genes 10 All other mammals have seven cervical vertebrae 11 other than the two toed and three toed sloths Like the horse the manatee has a simple stomach but a large cecum in which it can digest tough plant matter Generally the intestines are about 45 meters unusually long for an animal of the manatee s size 12 Evolution Fossil remains of manatee ancestors also known as sirenians date back to the Early Eocene 13 14 It is thought that they reached the isolated area of the South American continent and became known as Trichechidae In the Late Miocene trichechids were likely restricted in South American coastal rivers and they fed on many freshwater plants Dugongs inhabited the West Atlantic and Caribbean waters and fed on seagrass meadows instead As the sea grasses began to grow manatees adapted to the changing environment by growing supernumerary molars Sea levels lowered and increased erosion and silt runoff was caused by glaciation This increased the tooth wear of the bottom feeding manatees 15 Behavior Endangered Florida manatee Trichechus manatus Apart from mothers with their young or males following a receptive female manatees are generally solitary animals 8 Manatees spend approximately 50 of the day sleeping submerged surfacing for air regularly at intervals of less than 20 minutes The remainder of the time is mostly spent grazing in shallow waters at depths of 1 2 m 3 ft 3 in 6 ft 7 in The Florida subspecies T m latirostris has been known to live up to 60 years Locomotion Generally manatees swim at about 5 to 8 km h 3 to 5 mph However they have been known to swim at up to 30 km h 20 mph in short bursts 16 Intelligence and learning Manatee postures in captivity Manatees are capable of understanding discrimination tasks and show signs of complex associative learning They also have good long term memory 17 They demonstrate discrimination and task learning abilities similar to dolphins and pinnipeds in acoustic and visual studies 18 Social interactions between manatees are highly complex and intricate which may indicate higher intelligence than previously thought although they remain poorly understood by science 19 Reproduction Manatees typically breed once every two years generally only a single calf is born Gestation lasts about 12 months and to wean the calf takes a further 12 to 18 months 8 although females may have more than one estrous cycle per year 20 Communication Manatees emit a wide range of sounds used in communication especially between cows and their calves 21 Their ears are large internally but the external openings are small and they are located four inches behind each eye 22 Adults communicate to maintain contact and during sexual and play behaviors Taste and smell in addition to sight sound and touch may also be forms of communication 23 Diet Manatees are herbivores and eat over 60 different freshwater e g floating hyacinth pickerel weed alligator weed water lettuce hydrilla water celery musk grass mangrove leaves and saltwater plants e g sea grasses shoal grass manatee grass turtle grass widgeon grass sea clover and marine algae 24 25 Using their divided upper lip an adult manatee will commonly eat up to 10 15 of their body weight about 50 kg per day Consuming such an amount requires the manatee to graze for up to seven hours a day 26 To be able to cope with the high levels of cellulose in their plant based diet manatees utilize hindgut fermentation to help with the digestion process 27 Manatees have been known to eat small numbers of fish from nets 28 Feeding behavior Manatee plate Manatees use their flippers to walk along the bottom whilst they dig for plants and roots in the substrate When plants are detected the flippers are used to scoop the vegetation toward the manatee s lips The manatee has prehensile lips the upper lip pad is split into left and right sides which can move independently The lips use seven muscles to manipulate and tear at plants Manatees use their lips and front flippers to move the plants into the mouth The manatee does not have front teeth however behind the lips on the roof of the mouth there are dense ridged pads These horny ridges and the manatee s lower jaw tear through ingested plant material 26 Dentition Manatees have four rows of teeth There are 6 to 8 high crowned open rooted molars located along each side of the upper and lower jaw giving a total of 24 to 32 flat rough textured teeth Eating gritty vegetation abrades the teeth particularly the enamel crown however research indicates that the enamel structure in manatee molars is weak To compensate for this manatee teeth are continually replaced When anterior molars wear down they are shed Posterior molars erupt at the back of the row and slowly move forward to replace these like enamel crowns on a conveyor belt similarly to elephants This process continues throughout the manatee s lifetime The rate at which the teeth migrate forward depends on how quickly the anterior teeth abrade Some studies indicate that the rate is about 1 cm month although other studies indicate 0 1 cm month 26 EcologyRange and habitat Approximate distribution of Trichechus T manatus in green T inunguis in red T senegalensis in orange Three manatees Mother manatee and calf Manatees inhabit the shallow marshy coastal areas and rivers of the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico T manatus West Indian manatee the Amazon basin T inunguis Amazonian manatee and West Africa T senegalensis West African manatee 29 West Indian manatees prefer warmer temperatures and are known to congregate in shallow waters They frequently migrate through brackish water estuaries to freshwater springs They cannot survive below 15 C 60 F Their natural source for warmth during winter is warm spring fed rivers West Indian The coast of the state of Georgia is usually the northernmost range of the West Indian manatees because their low metabolic rate does not protect them in cold water Prolonged exposure to water below 20 C 68 F can cause cold stress syndrome and death 30 Florida manatees can move freely between fresh water and salt water Manatees have been seen as far north as Cape Cod and in 1995 31 and again in 2006 one was seen in New York City 32 and Rhode Island s Narragansett Bay A manatee was spotted in the Wolf River harbor near the Mississippi River in downtown Memphis in 2006 and was later found dead 16 km 10 mi downriver in McKellar Lake 33 Another manatee was found dead on a New Jersey beach in February 2020 considered especially unusual given the time of year 34 At the time of the manatee s discovery the water temperature in the area was below 6 5 C 43 7 F 35 The West Indian manatee migrates into Florida rivers such as the Crystal the Homosassa and the Chassahowitzka rivers whose headsprings are 22 C 72 F all year Between November and March each year about 600 West Indian manatees gather in the rivers in Citrus County Florida such as the Crystal River National Wildlife Refuge 36 In winter manatees often gather near the warm water outflows of power plants along the Florida coast instead of migrating south as they once did Some conservationists are concerned that these manatees have become too reliant on these artificially warmed areas 37 The U S Fish and Wildlife Service is trying to find a new way to heat the water for manatees that depended on plants that have closed citation needed Studies suggest that Florida manatees need access to fresh water for proper regulation of water and salts in their bodies citation needed Accurate population estimates of the West Indian manatee in Florida are difficult They have been called scientifically weak 38 because they vary widely from year to year with most areas showing decreases and little strong evidence of increases except in two areas Manatee counts are highly variable without an accurate way to estimate numbers In Florida in 1996 a winter survey found 2 639 manatees in 1997 a January survey found 2 229 and a February survey found 1 706 18 A statewide synoptic survey in January 2010 found 5 067 manatees living in Florida the highest number recorded to that time 39 As of January 2016 the USFWS estimates the range wide West Indian manatee population to be at least 13 000 as of January 2018 at least 6 100 are estimated to be in Florida 40 41 Population viability studies conducted in 1997 found that decreasing adult survival and eventual extinction were probable future outcomes for Florida manatees unless they received more protection 42 The U S Fish and Wildlife Service proposed downgrading the manatee s status from endangered to threatened in January 2016 after more than 40 years 43 Amazonian The freshwater Amazonian manatee T inunguis inhabits the Central Amazon Basin in Brazil eastern Peru southeastern Colombia but not Ecuador It is the only exclusively freshwater manatee and is also the smallest Since they are unable to reduce peripheral heat loss it is found primarily in tropical waters 44 West African They are found in coastal marine and estuarine habitats and in freshwater river systems along the west coast of Africa from the Senegal River south to the Cuanza River in Angola They live as far upriver on the Niger River as Koulikoro in Mali 2 000 km 1 200 mi from the coast 45 Predation In relation to the threat posed by humans predation does not present a significant threat to manatees 13 When threatened the manatee s response is to dive as deeply as it can suggesting that threats have most frequently come from land dwellers such as humans rather than from other water dwelling creatures such as caimans or sharks 13 Relation to humansMain article Manatee conservation Young manatees can be curious this individual is inspecting a kayak Antillean manatee Threats The main causes of death for manatees are human related issues such as habitat destruction and human objects Natural causes of death include adverse temperatures predation by crocodiles on young and disease 46 Ship strikes Their slow moving curious nature coupled with dense coastal development has led to many violent collisions with propeller driven boats and ships leading frequently to maiming disfigurement and even death As a result a large proportion of manatees exhibit spiral cutting propeller scars on their backs usually caused by larger vessels that do not have skegs in front of the propellers like the smaller outboard and inboard outboard recreational boats have They are now even identified by humans based on their scar patterns Many manatees have been cut in two by large vessels like ships and tug boats even in the highly populated lower St Johns River s narrow channels Some are concerned that the current situation is inhumane with upwards of 50 scars and disfigurements from vessel strikes on a single manatee 47 Often the lacerations lead to infections which can prove fatal Internal injuries stemming from being trapped between hulls and docks and impacts have also been fatal Recent testing citation needed shows that manatees may be able to hear speed boats and other watercraft approaching due to the frequency the boat makes However a manatee may not be able to hear the approaching boats when they are performing day to day activities or distractions The manatee has a tested frequency range of 8 to 32 kilohertz 48 Manatees hear on a higher frequency than would be expected for such large marine mammals Many large boats emit very low frequencies which confuse the manatee and explain their lack of awareness around boats The Lloyd s mirror effect results in low frequency propeller sounds not being discernible near the surface where most accidents occur Research indicates that when a boat has a higher frequency the manatees rapidly swim away from danger 49 In 2003 a population model was released by the United States Geological Survey that predicted an extremely grave situation confronting the manatee in both the Southwest and Atlantic regions where the vast majority of manatees are found It states In the absence of any new management action that is if boat mortality rates continue to increase at the rates observed since 1992 the situation in the Atlantic and Southwest regions is dire with no chance of meeting recovery criteria within 100 years 50 Hurricanes cold stress red tide poisoning and a variety of other maladies threaten manatees but by far their greatest danger is from watercraft strikes which account for about a quarter of Florida manatee deaths said study curator John Jett 51 According to marine mammal veterinarians Manatee bearing scars on its back from a boat propeller The severity of mutilations for some of these individuals can be astounding including long term survivors with completely severed tails major tail mutilations and multiple disfiguring dorsal lacerations These injuries not only cause gruesome wounds but may also impact population processes by reducing calf production and survival in wounded females observations also speak to the likely pain and suffering endured 18 In an example they cited one case study of a small calf with a severe dorsal mutilation trailing a decomposing piece of dermis and muscle as it continued to accompany and nurse from its mother by age 2 its dorsum was grossly deformed and included a large protruding rib fragment visible 18 These veterinarians go on to state T he overwhelming documentation of gruesome wounding of manatees leaves no room for denial Minimization of this injury is explicit in the Recovery Plan several state statutes and federal laws and implicit in our society s ethical and moral standards 18 One quarter of annual manatee deaths in Florida are caused by boat collisions with manatees 52 In 2009 of the 429 Florida manatees recorded dead 97 were killed by commercial and recreational vessels which broke the earlier record number of 95 set in 2002 53 54 Red tide Another cause of manatee deaths are red tides a term used for the proliferation or blooms of the microscopic marine algae Karenia brevis This dinoflagellate produces brevetoxins that can have toxic effects on the central nervous system of animals 55 In 1996 a red tide was responsible for 151 manatee deaths in Florida 56 The bloom was present from early March to the end of April and killed approximately 15 of the known population of manatees along South Florida s western coast 57 Other blooms in 1982 and 2005 resulted in 37 and 44 deaths respectively 58 Starvation In 2021 a massive die off of seagrass along the Atlantic coast of Florida left manatees without enough food to eat As a result of this ecological disaster Florida s manatees began dying at an alarming rate largely from starvation 59 In early 2022 the U S Fish and Wildlife Service began a feeding program to address the situation by distributing 3 000 pounds 1 361 kg of lettuce per day to save the malnourished animals 60 Additional threats Manatees can also be crushed and isolated in water control structures navigation locks floodgates etc and are occasionally killed by entanglement in fishing gear such as crab pot float lines box traps and shark nets 45 While humans are allowed to swim with manatees in one area of Florida 61 there have been numerous charges of people harassing and disturbing the manatees 62 According to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service approximately 99 manatee deaths each year are related to human activities 63 In January 2016 there were 43 manatee deaths in Florida alone 64 Conservation All three species of manatee are listed by the World Conservation Union as vulnerable to extinction However The U S Fish and Wildlife Service FWS does not consider the West Indian manatee to be endangered anymore having downgraded its status to threatened as of March 2017 They cite improvements to habitat conditions population growth and reductions of threats as reasoning for the change The reclassification was met with controversy with Florida congressman Vern Buchanan and groups such as the Save the Manatee Club and the Center for Biological Diversity expressing concerns that the change would have a detrimental effect on conservation efforts 65 The new classification will not affect current federal protections 40 West Indian manatees were originally classified as endangered with the 1967 class of endangered species 66 Manatee population in the United States reached a low in the 1970s during which only a few hundred individuals lived in the nation 67 As of February 2016 6 250 manatees were reported swimming in Florida s springs 68 It is illegal under federal and Florida law to injure or harm a manatee There are many conservation programs that have been created to help manatees Save the Manatee Club is a non profit group and membership organization that works to protect manatees and their aquatic ecosystems Founded by Bob Graham former Florida governor and singer songwriter Jimmy Buffett this is today s leading manatee conservation club 69 self published source The MV Freedom Star and MV Liberty Star ships used by NASA to tow Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters back to Kennedy Space Center were propelled only by water jets to protect the endangered manatee population that inhabits regions of the Banana River where the ships are based Brazil outlawed hunting in 1973 in an effort to preserve the species Deaths by boat strikes are still common 70 71 Although countries are protecting Amazonian manatees in the locations where they are endangered as of 1994 there were no enforced laws and the manatees were still being captured throughout their range 72 Captivity A manatee at SeaWorld Florida There are a number of manatee rehabilitation centers in the United States These include three government run critical care facilities in Florida at Lowry Park Zoo Miami Seaquarium and SeaWorld Orlando After initial treatment at these facilities the manatees are transferred to rehabilitation facilities before release These include the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden Columbus Zoo and Aquarium Epcot s The Seas South Florida Museum and Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park 73 The Columbus Zoo was a founding member of the Manatee Rehabilitation Partnership in 2001 Since 1999 the zoo s Manatee Bay facility has helped rehabilitate 20 manatees 74 The Cincinnati Zoo has rehabilitated and released more than a dozen manatees since 1999 75 Manatees can also be viewed in a number of European zoos such as the Tierpark Berlin and the Nuremberg Zoo in Germany in ZooParc de Beauval in France the Aquarium of Genoa in Italy and the Royal Burgers Zoo in Arnhem the Netherlands where manatees have parented offspring 76 The River Safari at Singapore features seven of them 77 The oldest manatee in captivity was Snooty 78 at the South Florida Museum s Parker Manatee Aquarium in Bradenton Florida Born at the Miami Aquarium and Tackle Company on July 21 1948 Snooty was one of the first recorded captive manatee births Raised entirely in captivity Snooty was never to be released into the wild As such he was the only manatee at the aquarium and one of only a few captive manatees in the United States that was allowed to interact with human handlers That made him uniquely suitable for manatee research and education 79 Snooty died suddenly two days after his 69th birthday July 23 2017 when he was found in an underwater area only used to access plumbing for the exhibit life support system The South Florida Museum s initial press release stated Early indications are that an access panel door that is normally bolted shut had somehow been knocked loose and that Snooty was able to swim in 80 Guyana Since the 19th century Georgetown Guyana has kept West Indian manatees in its botanical garden and later its national park 81 In the 1910s and again in the 1950s sugar estates in Guyana used manatees to keep their irrigation canals weed free 82 Between the 1950s and 1970s the Georgetown water treatment plant used manatees in their storage canals for the same purpose 83 Culture The manatee has been linked to folklore on mermaids 70 In West African folklore they were considered sacred and thought to have been once human Killing one was taboo and required penance 84 In the novel Moby Dick Herman Melville distinguishes manatees Lamatins cf lamantins from small whales stating I am aware that down to the present time the fish styled Lamatins and Dugongs Pig fish and Sow fish of the Coffins of Nantucket are included by many naturalists among the whales But as these pig fish are a noisy contemptible set mostly lurking in the mouths of rivers and feeding on wet hay and especially as they do not spout I deny their credentials as whales and have presented them with their passports to quit the Kingdom of Cetology 85 A manatee called Wardell appears in the Animal Crossing New Horizons video game He is part of a paid downloadable content expansion managing and selling furniture to the player 86 See also Mammals portal Marine life portalDwarf manatee Manatee of HelenaReferences Trichechus Linnaeus 1758 manatee Fossilworks org West Indian Manatee Facts and Pictures National Geographic Kids Archived 2011 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Kids nationalgeographic com Retrieved on 2011 12 03 Winger Jennifer 2000 What s in a name Manatees and Dugongs National Zoological Park Friends of the National Zoo Archived from the original on 30 December 2005 Retrieved 19 June 2015 Walters Martin Johnson Jinny 2003 Encyclopedia of Animals Marks and Spencer p 229 ISBN 1 84273 964 6 Domning D P 1994 Paleontology and evolution of sirenians Status of knowledge and research needs in Proceedings of the 1st International Manatee and Dugong Research Conference Gainesville Florida 1 5 The Florida Manatee Trichechus manatus latirostrus The Amy H Remley Foundation Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved August 15 2013 Shoshani J ed 2000 Elephants Majestic Creatures of the Wild Checkmark Books ISBN 0 87596 143 6 a b c d Best Robin 1984 Macdonald D ed The Encyclopedia of Mammals New York Facts on File pp 292 298 ISBN 0 87196 871 1 Hautier Lionel Weisbecker V Sanchez Villagra M R Goswami A Asher R J 2010 Skeletal development in sloths and the evolution of mammalian vertebral patterning PNAS 107 44 18903 18908 Bibcode 2010PNAS 10718903H doi 10 1073 pnas 1010335107 PMC 2973901 PMID 20956304 Sticking Their Necks out for Evolution Why Sloths and Manatees Have Unusually Long or Short Necks May 6th 2011 Science Daily Retrieved 25 July 2013 Frietson Galis 1999 Why do almost all mammals have seven cervical vertebrae Developmental constraints Hox genes and Cancer PDF Journal of Experimental Zoology 285 1 19 26 doi 10 1002 SICI 1097 010X 19990415 285 1 lt 19 AID JEZ3 gt 3 0 CO 2 Z PMID 10327647 Archived from the original PDF on 2004 11 10 Manatee Anatomy Facts PDF a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c Marsh Helene 2011 Ecology and Conservation of the Sirenia Dugongs and Manatees O Shea Thomas J Reynolds III John E Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 15887 9 OCLC 782876868 de Souza Erica Martinha Silva Freitas Lucas da Silva Ramos Elisa Karen Selleghin Veiga Giovanna Rachid Ribeiro Michelle Carneiro Silva Felipe Andre Marmontel Miriam dos Santos Fabricio Rodrigues Laudisoit Anne Verheyen Erik Domning Daryl P 2021 02 11 The evolutionary history of manatees told by their mitogenomes Scientific Reports 11 1 3564 Bibcode 2021NatSR 11 3564D doi 10 1038 s41598 021 82390 2 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 7878490 PMID 33574363 Domning Daryl P 1982 Evolution of Manatees A Speculative History Journal of Paleontology 56 3 599 619 JSTOR 1304394 Manatee FAQ Behavior www savethemanatee org Retrieved 2016 09 15 Gerstein E R 1994 The manatee mind Discrimination training for sensory perception testing of West Indian manatees Trichechus manatus Marine Mammals 1 10 21 a b c d e Marine Mammal Medicine 2001 Leslie Dierauf amp Frances Gulland CRC Press Henaut Yann Charles Aviva Delfour Fabienne 24 August 2022 Cognition of the manatee past research and future developments Animal Cognition 25 5 1049 1058 doi 10 1007 s10071 022 01676 8 PMID 36002602 S2CID 251808935 Retrieved 29 October 2022 Jeff Ripple 1999 Manatees and Dugongs of the World Voyageur Press ISBN 978 1 61060 443 7 estrous O Shea Thomas J Lynn B Poche Jr 2006 Aspects of Underwater Sound Communication in Florida Manatees Trichechus manatus latirostris Journal of Mammalogy 87 6 1061 1071 doi 10 1644 06 MAMM A 066R1 1 ISSN 0022 2372 JSTOR 4126883 S2CID 42302073 Manatee Ears Cause for Alarm Bird s Underwater Birds Underwater 2017 08 01 Archived from the original on 2017 10 07 Retrieved 2017 10 06 Animal Info Book Manatee Seaworld Parks amp Entertainment Archived from the original on 2017 10 07 Retrieved 2016 08 07 Lefebvre Lynn W Provancha Jane A Slone Daniel H Kenworthy W Judson 2017 Manatee grazing impacts on a mixed species seagrass bed Marine Ecology Progress Series 564 29 45 Bibcode 2017MEPS 564 29L doi 10 3354 meps11986 ISSN 0171 8630 JSTOR 24898254 Domning Daryl P 1981 Sea Cows and Sea Grasses Paleobiology 7 4 417 420 doi 10 1017 S009483730002546X ISSN 0094 8373 JSTOR 2400692 S2CID 88809167 a b c Manatee Journey North 2003 Archived from the original on April 29 2014 Retrieved April 29 2014 Castellini and Mellish Michael and Jo Ann 2016 Marine Mammal Physiology Boca Raton Florida CRC Press p 101 ISBN 978 1 4822 4267 6 Powell James 1978 Evidence for carnivory in manatee Trichechus manatus Journal of Mammalogy 59 2 442 doi 10 2307 1379938 JSTOR 1379938 Trials of a Primatologist smithsonianmag com Accessed March 15 2008 Basu Rebecca 1 March 2010 Winter is culprit in manatee death toll Melbourne Florida Florida Today p 1A Archived from the original on February 22 2014 TRAVELIN MANATEE FAR FROM HOME AGAIN Deseret News 23 August 1995 Archived from the original on 1 January 2016 Retrieved 1 January 2016 Lee Jennifer 8 7 August 2006 Massive Manatee Is Spotted in Hudson River The New York Times Retrieved 1 January 2016 Manatee found dead in Tenn lake Associated Press 11 December 2006 Retrieved 1 January 2016 Dead manatee found along Jersey Shore ABC7 New York 2020 02 11 Archived from the original on 2020 02 13 Retrieved 2020 02 14 Ltd Copyright Global Sea Temperatures A Connect Atlantic City NJ Water Temperature United States Sea Temperatures World Sea Temperatures Retrieved 2020 02 14 US Fish and Wildlife Service November 14 2017 About the Refuge Crystal River National Wildlife Refuge Florida Archived from the original on October 30 2020 Retrieved January 28 2020 Keith Morelli January 7 2011 Can manatees survive without warm waters from power plants The Tampa Tribune Retrieved 2012 05 04 U S Marine Mammal Commission 1999 Exceptional weather conditions lead to record high manatee count Press release Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission January 20 2010 Archived from the original on February 14 2011 Retrieved 3 February 2017 a b Service U S Fish and Wildlife U S Fish and Wildlife Service to Reclassify West Indian Manatee from Endangered to Threatened www fws gov Press release Manatee Synoptic Surveys Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission 2018 Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Retrieved 21 July 2018 Marmontel Humphrey O Shea 1997 Population Variability Analysis of the Florida Manatee 1976 1992 Conserv biol 11 467 481 Record 6 250 Manatees Spotted in Florida Waters Discovery February 26 2016 Archived from the original on February 28 2016 Retrieved February 26 2016 Amazonian Manatee Facts Information amp Habitat Retrieved 2021 12 24 a b Keith Diagne L 2016 Trichechus senegalensis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22104A97168578 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link permanent dead link Luiselli L Akani G C Ebere N Angelici F M Amori G Politano E 2012 Macro habitat preferences by the African manatee and crocodiles ecological and conservation implications Web Ecology 12 1 39 48 doi 10 5194 we 12 39 2012 Florida boaters killing endangered manatees Cyber Diver News Network 11 January 2006 Gaspard Joseph C Bauer Gordon B Reep Roger L Dziuk Kimberly Cardwell Adrienne Read Latoshia Mann David A 2012 Audiogram and auditory critical ratios of two Florida manatees Trichechus manatus latirostris Journal of Experimental Biology 215 9 1442 1447 doi 10 1242 jeb 065649 PMID 22496279 S2CID 11725126 Manatees hard of hearing Scienceagogo com 1999 07 30 Retrieved on 2011 12 03 Long Term Prospects for Manatee Recovery Look Grim According To New Data Released By Federal Government Archived 2007 07 12 at the Wayback Machine Savethemanatee org 2003 04 29 Retrieved on 2011 12 03 ufl edu Archived 2010 06 12 at the Wayback Machine News ufl edu 2007 07 03 Retrieved on 2011 12 03 Aipanjiguly Sampreethi Jacobson Susan K Flamm Richard 2003 Conserving Manatees Knowledge Attitudes and Intentions of Boaters in Tampa Bay Florida Conservation Biology 17 4 1098 1105 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 2003 01452 x S2CID 86770081 Archived from the original on 2021 11 26 Retrieved 2021 11 26 Manatee Mortality Statistics Fish and Wildlife Research Institute Archived from the original on 1 April 2011 Retrieved 1 December 2010 Manatee Deaths From Boat Strikes Approach Record Club Asks For Boaters Urgent Help Save the Manatee Club Archived from the original on 2011 02 08 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Flewelling LJ Naar JP Abbott JP Baden DG Barros NB Bossart GD Bottein MY Hammond DG et al 9 June 2005 Brevetoxicosis Red tides and marine mammal mortalities Nature 435 7043 755 756 Bibcode 2005Natur 435 755F doi 10 1038 nature435755a PMC 2659475 PMID 15944690 Manatee death toll hits record in Florida Red Tide blamed Reuters Retrieved 1 February 2016 Scientists Say Toxin in Red Tide Killed Scores of Manatees New York Times July 5 1996 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Mystery epidemic killing manatees Local amp State April 9 1996 p 38 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Greg Allen 2 Dec 2021 Manatees are starving in Florida Wildlife agencies are scrambling to save them NPR Retrieved 24 Feb 2022 Amanda Jackson 17 Feb 2022 Florida wildlife officials are distributing 3 000 pounds of lettuce a day to save starving manatees CNN Help End Manatee Harassment in Citrus County Florida Archived 2007 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Savethemanatee org Retrieved on 2011 12 03 St Petersburg Times Manatee Abuse Caught on Tape Archived 2009 06 01 at the Wayback Machine Sptimes com Retrieved on 2011 12 03 Tribune Chicago Monarch butterfly manatee populations are on a big rebound chicagotribune com Retrieved 2016 03 01 January 2016 Preliminary Manatee Mortality Table by County PDF January 2016 Archived from the original PDF on March 6 2016 Retrieved February 20 2016 Wang Amy B March 31 2017 Manatees are no longer listed as endangered Should we celebrate or fret The Washington Post Endangered Species Class of 1967 www fws gov Archived from the original on 2020 05 24 Retrieved 2020 01 30 Manatee reclassified from endangered to threatened as habitat improves and population expands existing federal protections remain in place Southeast Region of the U S Fish and Wildlife Service Archived from the original on 2020 05 29 Retrieved 2020 04 07 Record breaking number of manatees counted during annual winter survey Tampa Bay Times Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2016 03 01 Save The Manatees Save The Manatees a b Fairclough Caty From Mermaids to Manatees the Myth and the Reality Smithsonian Ocean ocean si edu Retrieved 2021 12 24 New Study Shows Impact of Watercraft on Manatees Florida Fish And Wildlife Conservation Commission Retrieved 2021 12 24 Weber Rosas F C June 1994 Biology conservation and status of the Amazonian Manatee Trichechus inunguis Mammal Review 24 2 49 59 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2907 1994 tb00134 x Manatee Rescue Rehabilitation and Release Program Archived from the original on 2017 01 01 Retrieved 2016 12 31 Global Impact Project Retrieved 2016 12 31 Rescue Rehabilitation and Release of Florida Manatees Retrieved 2016 12 31 Adventure in the mangrove forest Retrieved 2021 06 11 Manatees move into world s largest freshwater aquarium at River Safari 13 March 2013 Retrieved 2013 07 24 Aronson Claire Guinness World Records names Snooty of Bradenton as Oldest Manatee in Captivity bradenton com Bradenton Herald Archived from the original on 28 June 2015 Retrieved 26 June 2015 Snooty the Manatee South Florida Museum ISBN 978 1 56944 441 2 Oldest living manatee in captivity dies a day after celebrating 69th birthday 23 July 2017 Retrieved 2017 07 23 Abary Creek manatees under threat Stabroek News 30 September 2008 Retrieved 16 June 2020 there are 23 manatees between the Botanical Gardens and the National Park They have been there for more than 129 years and reports are that they came from the Abary Creek dead link National Science Research Council Guyana 1974 An International Centre for Manatee Research Georgetown Guyana National Academies p 13 National Research Council 2002 Making Aquatic Weeds Useful The Minerva Group p 35 ISBN 978 0 89499 180 6 In the Georgetown Water and Sewerage Works two manatees were introduced in 1952 to a canal In the 24 years since then manatees have been used to keep this water the city s municipal supply weed free Cooper JC 1992 Symbolic and Mythological Animals London Aquarian Press p 157 ISBN 1 85538 118 4 Melville Herman 1851 Footnote Chapter 32 Cetology Moby Dick or The Whale Richard Bentley Fahey Mike 18 October 2021 Animal Crossing Fans Are Deeply In Love With Wardell The Manatee Kotaku G O Media Archived from the original on 27 October 2021 Retrieved 14 June 2022 Further readingHall Alice J September 1984 Man and Manatee Can We Live Together National Geographic Vol 166 no 3 pp 400 418 ISSN 0027 9358 OCLC 643483454 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trichechus Save the Manatee Murie James On the Form and Structure of the Manatee Manatus americanus 1872 London Zoological Society of London Year Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Archived 2018 12 12 at the Wayback Machine Reuters Florida manatees may lose endangered status A website with many manatee photos USGS SESC Sirenia Project Bibliography and Index of the Sirenia and Desmostylia Dr Domning s authoritative manatee research bibliography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manatee amp oldid 1136205951, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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