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.
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. 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. Testing and studies from the 2000s and 2010s suggested 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. 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. 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, According to marine mammal
veterinarians: These veterinarians go on to state: One-quarter of annual manatee deaths in Florida are caused by boat collisions with manatees. 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.
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. 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. Other blooms in 1982 and 2005 resulted in 37 and 44 deaths respectively, and a red tide killed 123 manatees between November 2022 and June 2023.
Starvation In 2021 a massive die-off of
seagrass along the
Atlantic coast of
Florida left manatees without enough food to eat, and they began dying at high rates. The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service responded with a feeding program that distributing 3,000 pounds (1,361 kg) of
lettuce per day to the manatee population.
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. there have been numerous charges of people harassing and disturbing the manatees. According to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, approximately 99 manatee deaths each year are related to human activities. In January 2016, there were 43 manatee deaths in Florida alone.
Conservation in Brazil, . Brazil outlawed manatee hunting in 1973. 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. The new classification will not affect current federal protections. Manatee deaths in the state of Florida nearly doubled in 2021 from 637 (2020) to 1100. Although this number decreased to 800 in 2022, it is likely that current rate of development in Florida, climate change, and decreasing water quality, habitat range, and genetic diversity among this population may lead to reconsideration of the West Indian Manatee as an endangered species. Manatee population in the United States reached a low in the 1970s, during which only a few hundred individuals lived in the nation. As of February 2016, 6,250 manatees were reported swimming in Florida's springs. It is illegal under federal and Florida law to injure or harm a manatee. Also in Florida, due to extensive destruction of their habitat, manatees rely on the warm waters created by a major power plant's hot water effluent streams to survive during the cold winter months. Manatee reliance on these effluent streams is such that the streams are protected under federal environmental legislation. Researchers have theorized that the prevalence of manatee sightings near this power plant is contributing to "collective inattention" to industrialization and development as ongoing causes of manatee habitat destruction. 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. 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. 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.
Captivity |alt=Underwater photo of manatee 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. 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. The Cincinnati Zoo has rehabilitated and released more than a dozen manatees since 1999. 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. The
River Safari at
Singapore features seven of them. The oldest manatee in captivity was
Snooty, 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. 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."
Guyana Since the 19th century,
Georgetown, Guyana has kept
West Indian manatees in
its botanical garden, and later,
its national park. In the 1910s and again in the 1950s,
sugar estates in Guyana used manatees to keep their irrigation canals weed-free. Between the 1950s and 1970s, the Georgetown
water treatment plant used manatees in their storage canals for the same purpose.
Culture The manatee has been linked to folklore on
mermaids. In the cosmogony of the
Serer people of Senegal, Gambia, and Mauritania, the cayman and the manatee holds great significance in
Serer mythology. The cayman is believed to hold the secrets of the past whilst the manatee holds the secrets of the future. In the novel
Moby-Dick,
Herman Melville distinguishes manatees ("Lamatins", cf.
lamatins) 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." 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. In
Rudyard Kipling's
The White Seal (one of the stories in
The Jungle Book), Sea Cow, about whom the story says that he has only six cervical vertebrae, is a manatee. The manatees Friends West Indian Manatee, Dugong, and Steller's Sea Cow appear in multiple
Kemono Friends games, including the app version of Kemono Friends 3. In the Neapolitan region of Italy, a culinary legend exists around the consumption of manatees during
World War II. In the story, when Naples and
Salerno surrendered to the Allies in 1943, the cities, lacking food supplies thanked the Allied generals by serving manatee from the aquarium. When this was revealed, the popular reaction was not shock, but questions over how it was prepared, to which the answer was "aglio-olio [garlic and olive oil], of course, with a little parsley." == See also ==