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Florida Manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris)

Florida ManateeThe Florida manatee, a subspecies of the West Indian manatee, occurs only in the southeastern United States. It occupies the northern limit of the species’ range, which extends south along the eastern coast of the Americas to Brazil. Manatees are slow-moving aquatic herbivores that feed in freshwater systems and the ocean. They rarely venture into near-shore ocean waters except to travel between adjacent rivers or estuaries. Prolonged exposure to water temperatures below 18°C (65°F) can be lethal to manatees. Therefore, during winter, Florida manatees are largely confined to the lower two-thirds of the Florida Peninsula. There they aggregate around warm-water springs and thermal outfalls from power plants, or remain in the Everglades at the southern tip of the state. As water temperatures rise in spring and summer, manatees disperse widely throughout the state, although individual animals rarely move from one coast to the other. A few east coast animals range northward into coastal Georgia and the Carolinas, and west coast manatees occasionally travel westward to Louisiana. Movements beyond those limits are unusual.

Although historical information on manatees in Florida is sparse, scientists believe that their abundance was greatly reduced by commercial and subsistence hunting in the 1800s. In 1893, Florida prohibited the killing of manatees, thus making them one of the first wildlife species in the United States to receive protection. Since passage of the Endangered Species Act in 1973, West Indian manatees, including the Florida manatee, have been listed as endangered.

Range and Habitat:

Coasts, estuaries, and rivers of Florida

Status under Law:

Endangered (ESA)

Conservation issues:

Collisions with boats, habitat degradation, coastal development, availability of warm water refuges, entrapment in water control structures, red-tide related die-offs, entanglement in lost and discarded marine debris

Physical characteristics:

At Birth At Maturity
Length 80-160 cm
(31-63")
3.7-4.1 m
(12'-13'6")
Weight 30 kg
(66 lb)
1,400 kg
(3,000 lb)

Age:

60-70 years

Annual Report:

For more information, see the Florida Manatee section from the 2002 Annual Report

Download a copy: PDF (270 KB)

Commission Letters:

To view Commission letters concerning Manatees choose a date below

June 3, 2003

January 24, 2003

Additional Links:

National Marine Fisheries Service Stock Assessment Reports

Florida Marine Research Institute - Manatee Information

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service - Florida Manatee Issues and Information

U.S. Geological Survey - Biology and Ecology of Marine Mammals

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