Springfield News-Sun

Manatee deaths highest in a decade

-

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. — A combinatio­n of cold weather, a decline in seagrass due to developmen­t and contaminat­ed waterways have put Florida on pace for its highest number of manatee deaths in a decade.

The number of deaths, 432 so far this year, is nearly three times the five-year average of 146 deaths between Jan. 1 and March 5, the South Florida SunSentine­l reported, citing figures from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission. Last year, the state recorded 637 manatee deaths, and in 2019, 607.

“It’s this combinatio­n we have of cold weather, we have a reduction of where manatees can go, and in the places where manatees can go, as a consequenc­e of human developmen­t and other activities, we have poor water quality which has resulted in these grass die-offs,” said Jaclyn Lopez, Florida director of the Center for Biological Diversity.

The largest number of deaths is in Brevard County, with 179, the newspaper reported. Many of those deaths occurred along the Indian River, which is a common warm water gathering place, officials said. The manatees swim away to eat sea grass, which is their main source of food. But they aren’t finding as much, so they return hungry to the warmer water.

“A manatee will choose starvation over freezing to death,” Lopez said.

Officials said cold stress has accounted for 41 deaths so far. There were 52 coldstress deaths among manatees in 2020, officials said.

Patrick Rose, an aquatic biologist and executive director of the Save the Manatee Club, told the SunSentine­l that typically manatees would stay in the Banana River or Mosquito Lagoon, in the northern end of the Indian River Lagoon. But the loss of sea grass there is forcing them into other areas.

The southern end of the Indian River Lagoon has suffered from a series of algal blooms and phytoplank­ton blooms, and the infusion of fresh water and nutrients from Lake Okeechobee has stressed that system and wiped out much of its sea grass, the newspaper reported.

Rose said there are probably more manatee deaths than the state has documented and the causes might not be accurately attributed.

While the state wildlife commission rescues sick and injured manatees, coronaviru­s pandemic-related personnel shortages and restrictio­ns have meant that nearly 70% of the dead manatees have not had necropsies to determine their causes, Rose said.

 ?? AP FILE 2017 ?? Cold weather, a decline in seagrass and contaminat­ed waterways have put Florida’s manatees at risk.
AP FILE 2017 Cold weather, a decline in seagrass and contaminat­ed waterways have put Florida’s manatees at risk.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States