Miami Herald

Floodgates in Florida killed more manatees in 2020 than in past years

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission’s manatee mortality report found that floodgates killed twice as many manatees as in previous years. Speeding boaters led the human-induced death causes.

- BY ADRIANA BRASILEIRO abrasileir­o@miamiheral­d.com

In a year when a third of manatee fatalities in Florida were not investigat­ed because COVID-19 restrictio­ns limited necropsies and boat strikes once again topped deaths caused by humans, one indicator stood out: manatees killed by floodgates and locks.

Of a total of 619 deaths in Florida’s waterways last year, 10 manatees were crushed or drowned in flood control structures, according to the Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission’s preliminar­y mortality report. It may seem like a small number compared with the 90 animals that died after being hit by boats. But it’s twice the number of manatees killed by flood gates last year, and more than double the average of four deaths over the past five years.

Last year was exceptiona­lly wet and floodgates worked intensely to keep water from inundating cities and fields. But manatees shouldn’t die in flood control structures, at least in theory. Since

the 1990s, Florida’s vast network of gates that regulate water flows have been equipped with sensors that are activated if manatees are near. This technology stops gates from closing, allowing the animals to swim through. “These are all preventabl­e deaths,” said Sarah Gledhill from the Center for Biological Diversity. “And in general, we should not think that it’s normal for hundreds of manatees to die in Florida every year.”

Though Florida’s manatee population has increased to an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 over the past few decades largely as a result of slow-speed zones and boater education campaigns, deaths climbed in 2020 from 592 in the previous year, the FWC’s preliminar­y count showed. Last year wasn’t as bad as 2018, when a toxic red tide killed scores of marine animals including dozens of manatees around the Gulf Coast. More than 800 manatees died that year, and about 200 deaths were attributed to the yearlong red tide event.

But 2020 was a very wet year, with record-breaking rainfall drenching South Florida right at the beginning of the season in May and then again through October, before Tropical Storm Eta slammed the region in November. The extreme conditions left water managers scrambling to find places to move water by activating flood control systems much more frequently, which may have led to an increase in incidents, said Patrick Rose, executive director of the Save the Manatee Club.

“When there is a lot of rain the chances for problems increase even in areas where manatee safety measures have been taken,” Rose said. “It also causes manatees to venture into areas where they have not traditiona­lly visited and become entrapped in structures not yet made safe for them, which is what happened.”

FWC said in a statement that water levels affected the annual number of structurer­elated manatee deaths because water control structures operate more frequently, increasing the risk to manatees and also providing the animals access to areas and structures they are not normally able to reach. “The FWC is continuing to work with the Water Control Structure Working Group to try and determine what caused

these manatee deaths and discuss ways to reduce future deaths,” according to the statement.

The South Florida Water Management District, which manages these structures, said it conducts preventive maintenanc­e and inspection­s on the structures on a quarterly basis, and that manatee sensors “are successful 99% of the time.”

In one recent case that’s still under investigat­ion, a manatee was found decapitate­d near a salinity barrier in Miami’s Little River. On Dec. 15, WPLG reported that wildlife biologist Natalie Mahomar spotted a carcass while birdwatchi­ng with a friend near the structure north of 82nd Street. “The body was on one side and the head was on the other side of the gate,” Mahomar told WPLG.

Miami Waterkeepe­r’s Rachel Silverstei­n speculated that the gates may have closed on the sea cow as it was attempting to swim across the large S27 structure, which serves a dual function: flood control and prevention of saltwater intrusion.

The WaterManag­ement District said the manatee protection feature was apparently functionin­g properly but that it’s working with the FWC to determine the cause of death. An investigat­ion report should be concluded soon, said spokesman Randy

Smith. Though wildlife managers cut down on necropsies to ensure social distancing and protect staff from COVID-19 exposure, FWC didn’t slow efforts to rescue the sea cows when they were reported to be in distress. Many were rescued: 120 last year compared with 96 in 2019, according to marinemamm­al rescue data. Most rescues were involved in boat collisions.

The 2020 manatee mortality report raised some old concerns about threats to the gentle marinemamm­al that serves as an indicator of the health of Florida’s waters. While deaths caused by watercraft have dropped compared with previous decades, they are still high andmay have been significan­tly undercount­ed last year due to COVID-related disruption­s.

Manatee awareness among boaters must improve, especially in fast-growing places like South Florida, where newcomers from out of state and abroad are constantly joining the boating community but often don’t have the experience navigating local waters, Rose said.

New boater safety legislatio­n being proposed by wildlife managers to protect people can indirectly benefit manatees in the future. Wildlife managers are proposing a regulation that would require anyone piloting a vessel to have a boating safety identifica­tion card issued by the FWC, instead of just people aged 32 and under. But the 2020 tally also showed signs that deteriorat­ing water quality and habitat loss in certain areas may be making it harder for manatees to survive, and those trends will likely get worse.

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.

 ?? USFWS ?? Habitat loss adds to the challenges manatees face in Florida’s waterways, where speeding boaters account for about 20% of manatee deaths yearly.
USFWS Habitat loss adds to the challenges manatees face in Florida’s waterways, where speeding boaters account for about 20% of manatee deaths yearly.

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