Florida Manatees Continue to Face Difficult Times as Food Sources Dwindle

Florida Manatees Continue to Face Difficult Times as Food Sources Dwindle



Manatees, the gentle giants commonly seen in Florida’s waterways, are once again facing challenges over the winter. It used to be due to unusually chilly cold snaps, but in recent years it’s had as much to do with food — or a lack of it. This is a creature who can’t ever seem to catch a break.

If they’re not being run over and scarred by speeding boaters, then they’re searching for warmer waters to keep from freezing. Now, the seagrasses they sustain themselves on are dying off from pollution. The problem’s not new, but it is getting worse.

PHOTO: PIXABAY/PUBLICDOMAINIMAGES
PHOTO: PIXABAY/PUBLICDOMAINIMAGES

Brevard County

Because of its warm waters, the Florida Power & Light plant in Cape Canaveral sees hundreds of manatees packed into the intake canal on its southeast edge during winter months. Unfortunately, pollution along the Space Coast has decimated their usual diet of seagrasses typically found in the Indian River Lagoon, leading to starvation for many. For example, in 2021, 1,101 manatees died. In 2022, things weren’t much better, with the official estimate being nearly 800 deaths by December.

Now, in January 2023, members of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission are providing them with lettuce tossed along the edges of the canal in hopes of saving as many of them as possible.

PHOTO: PIXABAY/PUBLICDOMAINIMAGES
PHOTO: PIXABAY/PUBLICDOMAINIMAGES

Miami Waterkeeper

“It’s just emblematic of how dire the situation is,” stated Rachel Silverstein, executive director of the environmental nonprofit Miami Waterkeeper. “The point where we would need to artificially feed a wild animal because their ecosystem is so destroyed that they cannot find food for themselves is pretty extreme.”

A feeding program to supplement their food intake began in early 2022 and started again this winter due to what marine experts have called an “unusual mortality event” among sea cows. “It probably kept the manatees alive,” Silverstein acknowledged, “but it’s not a sustainable condition for manatees in the long term to need to rely on an artificial food source.” While it isn’t ideal, efforts still need to be made.

PHOTO: PIXABAY/EXTRABRANDT
PHOTO: PIXABAY/EXTRABRANDT

Florida Wildlife

Native to Florida, manatees are typically 9 to 10 feet in length and weigh around 1,000 pounds, but they can grow up to 13 feet long and weigh more than 3,500 pounds. As herbivores, they do this by spending up to eight hours a day grazing on seagrasses and other aquatic plants, consuming between 4 to 9 percent of their body weight in vegetation each day. That’s a lot of grass.

PIXABAY/FF16
PIXABAY/FF16

Save the Manatees

This article by Rebecca West was first published by The Animal Rescue Site. Lead Image: PIXABAY/FF16.

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