African manatees inhabit the widest ranges of habitats of any sirenian species, ranging from offshore islands in the Atlantic to rivers in the western Sahel, equatorial rainforest rivers, and so on. It has been reported that coastal populations ascend rivers during the rainy season and descend again during the dry season. The movement and habitat of the African manatee has been threatened by the building of agricultural and hydroelectric dams along rivers that isolate populations, such as the
Akosombo Dam in Ghana. The
Diama Dam has permanently isolated the Senegal River manatee population from the coast, as has the Felou Dam in Mali. African Manatees can be found in West African regions:
Angola,
Benin,
Cameroon,
Chad, the
Republic of the Congo, the
Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Côte d'Ivoire,
Equatorial Guinea,
Gabon,
The Gambia,
Ghana,
Guinea,
Guinea-Bissau,
Liberia,
Mali,
Mauritania,
Niger,
Nigeria,
Senegal,
Sierra Leone, and
Togo. Manatees are found in
brackish waters to freshwater: in oceans, rivers, lakes, coastal estuaries, reservoirs, lagoons, and bays on the coast. African manatees rarely inhabit waters with a temperature below Manatees have been found as far as offshore, where there are shallow coastal flats and calm
mangrove creeks filled with seagrass. Inland lakes where manatees dwell include
Lake Volta, the
Inner Niger River Delta in Mali,
Lake Léré, and Lake de Tréné. Due to fluctuating flow rates and water levels in rivers, some of these permanent lakes serve as refuges for manatees in connecting rivers during the dry season. From north to south, the river systems that contain manatees include: the
Senegal,
Saloum,
Gambia,
Casamance,
Cacheu, Mansôa,
Geba,
Buba, Tombali, Cacine, Kogon,
Konkouré,
Sierra Leone,
Great Scarcies,
Little Scarcies,
Sherbro, Malem, Waanje,
Sewa, Missunado,
Cavalla,
St. Paul, Morro,
St. John,
Bandama, Niouniourou,
Sassandra,
Comoé,
Bia,
Tano,
Volta,
Mono,
Oueme,
Niger,
Mekrou,
Benue,
Cross,
Katsena Ala,
Bani,
Akwayafe,
Rio del Rey, Ngosso, Andokat, Mene, Munaya,
Wouri,
Sanaga,
Faro,
Chari, Bamaingui, Bahr-Kieta,
Logoné,
Mitémélé,
Gabon,
Ogooué, Lovanzi,
Kouilou,
Congo,
Dande,
Bengo, and
Cuanza. Manatees move up these rivers until they are unable to proceed because of shallow waters or strong waterfalls. The areas with the highest manatee populations are Guinea-Bissau, the lagoons of Côte d'Ivoire, the southern portions of the Niger River in Nigeria, the Sanaga River in Cameroon, the coastal lagoons in Gabon, and the lower parts of the Congo River. As part of a study completed in Côte d'Ivoire to assess where the majority of African manatees favor living, a sample of African manatees was radio-tagged and tracked. The tracking observed most of the sample in coastal lagoons, mangroves, and other
herbaceous growths. They were also found in the grassy estuaries of big rivers with mangroves and in protected coastal spots with less than of water containing both mangroves and marine
macrophytes. ==Diet==