Lodi News-Sentinel

1,000 dead manatees: Florida surpasses a grim milestone

- Rose Wong

TAMPA, Fla. — Since July, every weekly update from state wildlife officials has set a new record for the most manatee deaths counted in a single year. On Wednesday, Florida crossed an especially tragic threshold: more than 1,000 manatees dead.

The exact count, through Nov. 12, was 1,003 manatees, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission.

That is up from 637 all of last year and far above the previous record, 830, in 2013. Florida passed the previous high halfway through 2021. Manatee death reports are filed each Friday and published by the state the following Wednesday.

“It makes me sad and angry,” said Patrick Rose, executive director of Save the Manatee Club, a conservati­on nonprofit.

The bad year got off to a quick start. Manatees took shelter from cold water by warm discharges from a power plant in the Indian River Lagoon off Brevard County, scientists say. The area is a typical wintering spot, but years of algal blooms there have killed tens of thousands of acres of seagrass. That destructio­n left manatees without enough food. Many starved.

“It could’ve been prevented,” Rose said. The algal blooms that have decimated the lagoon are fueled by human pollution, like septic and sewer overflows and fertilizer runoff during rainstorms.

Starvation is not the only culprit for manatee deaths, though. Nearly 100 have been killed in collisions with boats or other watercraft, according to Conservati­on Commission data. Red Tide has also contribute­d.

The Tampa Bay and Pinellas shorelines were hit hard by a toxic bloom this summer.

The die-off in 2021 has left some with fears for the long-term health of one of Florida’s most beloved and iconic species. Manatees are listed as a threatened animal, after federal wildlife regulators improved their status from endangered in 2017. The Conservati­on Commission in recent years estimated at least 7,520 were alive.

U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan, R-Fla., introduced a bill in August to return manatees to an endangered status. If passed, HR 4946 could draw more funding and attention, Buchanan said, which he hopes would help protect the creatures.

“I represent Manatee County. Manatees are so beloved there, but also across Florida,” Buchanan said. “People are very passionate about it.”

Manatees aren’t only cute, Rose said. Their health is a signal for the well-being of the overall ecosystem. Many fish and turtles also eat or live in seagrass, and poor water quality affects human health.

The damage that caused the die-off last winter is not easily repaired. State scientists and conservati­onists fear a repeat if manatees around Brevard County again struggle to find food this winter.

 ?? DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD/TAMPA BAY TIMES/TNS ?? Florida had already set a record for manatee deaths in 2021. The toll has now officially surpassed 1,000.
DOUGLAS R. CLIFFORD/TAMPA BAY TIMES/TNS Florida had already set a record for manatee deaths in 2021. The toll has now officially surpassed 1,000.

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