Feeding Manatees??? Not quite sure what's right, although FL MUST clean up it's act on drainage water!!

Roccus7

Moderator
Staff member

Lettuce, cabbage for manatees? Feds, conservationists consider feeding sea cows after 1,000 deaths​

pressherald.com/2021/11/20/lettuce-cabbage-for-manatees-feds-conservationists-consider-feeding-sea-cows-after-1000-deaths/

By Adriana Brasileiro November 20, 2021
Manatee_Deaths_74288-1637440388.jpg


MIAMI — Manatees are starving in Florida, so state and wildlife agencies are considering an unprecedented measure: supplemental feedings.
More than 1,000 manatees have died so far this year in Florida, a grim milestone that represents more than 10% of the population in the entire state. Most of the deaths are happening in Brevard County, where Indian River Lagoon provides an important refuge for the mammals to gather to escape cold water temperatures during winter months. Pollution and persistent algae blooms have killed off seagrass beds in the region in recent years, leaving manatees without enough of their primary source of food to make it through the winter.

State and federal wildlife agencies have set up a joint team to manage the emergency response and plans are being drawn up to provide manatees in the Indian River Lagoon area with just enough food and water so they don’t starve. The only thing missing is the approval from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service because it’s illegal to feed manatees according to federal and state law.

“We are considering a pilot program to do some supplemental feeding,” said Rodney Barreto, chairman of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC). “We continue to rescue manatees, and we want to be able to rescue even more during this emergency,” he told the Miami Herald. Barreto said he met for two hours on Thursday with Shannon Estenoz, Department of the Interior assistant secretary for fish and wildlife and parks, and Pedro Ramos of the National Park Service, who serves as superintendent for Everglades and Dry Tortugas national parks. They discussed water-quality issues but also possible measures to improve the chances of survival for manatees this winter, he said.

FWC said earlier this week that 1,003 manatees died so far this year, compared with 498 last year and 452 in 2019.

The emergency response to the unusual mortality, which triggered what the federal wildlife agency calls an Incident command system, aims to make rescue operations more efficient and better funded, the agencies said in a statement on Thursday.

“By now it’s already getting colder and manatees are congregating near the Cape Canaveral power plant and other areas in Indian River Lagoon where they always go for the winter,” said Patrick Rose, executive director of the Save the Manatee Club. “Our hope has been that right now we would have been picking several places and providing some supplemental food for them within the area. Before they get to a state of malnutrition that is irreversible.”

Rose said that government agencies and partners must test what food manatees will accept because nothing like this has ever been done in Florida. Transporting algae and nuisance aquatic vegetation to the area could be an option, as manatees could in theory get by on those plants. Agriculture-based greens could also be used, Rose said.

“But we need to test all that, we don’t know what foods they will accept. When you put lettuce in an estuarine environment, it’s going to wilt faster. So that may not work at all, we may need to use cabbage,” he said.

Another urgent step in the emergency response efforts is to expand the space available for rehabilitation. The joint team set up by the agencies will help address that, FWC and the Fish and Wildlife Service said in a statement.

Manatees gather in large groups in the winter in just a few spots, including the Indian River Lagoon, an estuary spanning more than 150 miles that historically supported hundreds of species that live on Florida’s east coast. Increased nutrient pollution in the northern end of the lagoon and the southern end wiped out much of the seagrass in those areas, forcing manatees to look for food elsewhere.

But water management structures and development have cut off much of their access to other traditional wintering areas. Often manatees end up in polluted man-made canals that don’t provide enough food and expose them to boat traffic.

Habitat loss is a key threat that is only getting worse, Rose said. Natural springs in central and northern Florida provide wintering refuges, but as springs have been developed or access cut off, the giant mammals began congregating near warm-water discharges from power plants.

That’s why manatees need more protection.

“We’re hoping this will be a wake-up call for all of Florida and for the federal agencies,” he said.

Environmentalists are pushing for the re-listing of manatees as an endangered species. Several conservation groups are trying to convince Congress to pass the Manatee Protection Act of 2021, which would designate the West Indian manatee as endangered and trigger more habitat protections for the mammals.

The sea cow, a distant relative of the elephant, was removed from the endangered species list in 2017 and down-listed to “threatened” after evidence that populations were recovering. But environmentalists say wildlife managers should not relax protections to give manatees a chance at surviving climate change and population growth challenges.

In October, FWC said it was asking legislators for nearly $7 million in the next fiscal year, as wildlife officials focus on finding solutions for Florida’s degraded waters.
In the new funding request, the commission is asking for $3 million to restore and enhance lakes, rivers, springs and estuarine habitats and $2.95 million to expand the Manatee Critical Care Network. Another $717,767 is being sought to increase manatee rescue efforts. Lawmakers will consider the requests during the 2022 legislative session, which starts in January.

Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday announced a $1.51 billion proposal for environmental spending that included $175 million for targeted water-quality improvements and $35 million to increase water-quality monitoring and to fight algae blooms.
 
No surprise here, they're kicking the can down the road, using the short-term feeding solution in stead of taking positive steps to eliminate the root cause, but hey, those Golf Courses need their fertilizer...

Wildlife officials move to feed Florida’s starving manatees​

pressherald.com/2021/12/07/wildlife-officials-move-to-feed-floridas-starving-manatees/

By Lori Rozsa December 8, 2021
[IMG alt="A manatee comes up for air last year as it swims in the Stranahan River in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

"]https://multifiles.pressherald.com/...P21292625393867-1638929201-1024x739.jpg[/IMG]
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – A record manatee die-off in Florida this year has become so dire that federal officials are taking a once-unthinkable step – feeding the wild marine mammals to help them survive the winter.

Even with a supplemental feeding program – delivering heads of lettuce and cabbage as the manatees gather around their traditional warm water wintering spots – biologists predict hundreds more of the iconic species are likely to perish.

Manatees rely mainly on sea grass, beds of which have been smothered by pollutants along with outbreaks of red tides and toxic algae blooms intensified by climate change.

“They’re having a very hard time finding food,” said Patrick Rose, executive director of the Save the Manatee Club. “The majority are quite malnourished.”

A subspecies of the West Indian manatee, Florida manatees were among the first animals to be listed as an endangered species by the federal government in 1967. Numbers had dipped to about 1,000 when Rose and other biologists began a public campaign to save the manatee.

Since then, the manatees have become Florida celebrities. The Florida Legislature designated it as the state’s official marine mammal; it appears on nearly 50,000 specialty license plates; hundreds of miles of waterways have no-wake zones; and manatee observation decks built around power plants attract thousands of tourists every winter. Nearly 40,000 manatees have been “adopted” through the Save the Manatee Club, which was founded by singer Jimmy Buffet and former senator Bob Graham, D-Fla.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will target one area south of the Kennedy Space Center: the Indian River Lagoon, where more than 500 manatees have died in 2021. The problem is especially acute in the northern Indian River Lagoon on Florida’s east coast, where roughly 96 percent of its 77,000 acres of sea grass have disappeared.

Manatees flock to the warm water discharged by power plants like Indian River because they don’t survive in water colder than 68 degrees. Historically, they spend winters near springs in Florida, where the water temperature doesn’t dip below 68 degrees.

“The question is, how do we get them through this winter?” Rose said. “Because there’s no reasonable amount of food available for them within the vicinity of the power plant where they go this time of year to stay warm. So they have this miserable choice between staying warm and forgoing food, or go out and try to find it and essentially die of cold stress.”

While boat strikes have ranked as the main cause of death among Florida manatees, starvation outpaced boating accidents in 2021.

The plan approved by the Fish and Wildlife Service would allow limited feeding in the Indian River Lagoon. Rose and others have been asking for permission to feed the animals since early this year, when emaciated manatees began showing up around the state.
The agency will announce the details of the plan Wednesday, including how to deliver food to manatees without any human interaction. Manatees can weigh up to 1,200 pounds, and measure as long as 14 feet. Rose said the animals need to eat about 10 percent of their body weight every day, and many have been trying to survive on algae.
They’ve also been seen trying to propel their way to eat grass on land along canal banks.
“They’re grazing on any low mangrove leaves they can find, and if there’s a lawn somewhere near where they happen to be in a canal system, they’re trying to eat grass off the bank,” Rose said. “They are struggling.”
After decades of recovery efforts, the number of manatees in Florida waters reached an estimated 6,620 in 2017, and federal scientists projected they would survive there for another 100 years. That same year the Trump administration shifted the manatee from an endangered to a threatened species, over the objections of many biologists and environmentalists.
“That signaled to people that the manatee was on the path to recovery, and that it doesn’t need all the help that it once did,” said Jaclyn Lopez, Florida director of the Center for Biological Diversity, an advocacy group. “That was done in spite of significant opposition from the conservation community that predicted this type of catastrophe. We had waterways that were in crisis as result of water pollution. So the downlisting in 2017 was premature. And here we are, four years later, and we lost 20% of the Atlantic population in just one season.”
Lopez said the popularity of manatees may help push policymakers to act, but they must move soon.
“You look at a manatee, and it’s like you’re looking at a golden retriever; it looks familiar, it feels safe. They really are just gentle giants,” Lopez said. “But when they’re starving, and you can see their bones, you shouldn’t be able to see their bones. They’re supposed to be chubby, not emaciated.”
 
📱 Fish Smarter with the NYAngler App!
Launch Now

Fishing Reports

Latest articles

Back
Top