![]() ![]() |
| Manatees are found in shallow, slow-moving rivers, bays, estuaries, and coastal water ecosystems. They can live in fresh, brackish, or salt water. These habitats provide them with sheltered living and breeding areas, a steady, easily obtainable food supply, and warm water - all of which manatees need to survive. |
| Range
The United States manatee population is concentrated primarily in Florida. Manatees are susceptible to cold-related disease and, in the winter, congregate near natural springs, which have a constant 72 degree F. temperature, or warm effluents of power plants or other industrial outfalls. Water temperatures below 68 degrees F. usually cause manatees to move into these warmer refuge areas. Individual manatees often return to the same wintering areas year after year. Between late March and November manatees migrate freely around Florida's rivers and coastal waters. A few may range as far north as the Carolinas and as far west as Louisiana during the summer months, but these sightings are rare. |
Food
Manatees are herbivores, feeding on a large variety of submerged, emergent, and floating plants. They can eat 10-15% of their body weight of vegetation daily. Seagrass beds are important feeding sites. Many of these coastal and estuarine feeding areas are particularly vulnerable to destruction by dredge and fill activities, surface water run-off from nearby construction sites or agricultural lands, herbicide spraying, and prop dredging.
While coastal and estuarine vegetation is declining, quite another problem is occurring in our fresh water bodies. In recent years, Florida has experienced an influx of exotic species, including freshwater vegetation. Because exotic species originate elsewhere and are not native to Florida, they have no natural enemies here, and consequently can grow unchecked. Our fresh water bodies have become clogged with such vegetation. Manatees eat exotic plants, but there aren't enough manatees to control these unwanted plants in all the areas where they are found. Some favorite foods of the manatees in Florida include: |
Marine Vegetation
|
Freshwater Vegetation
|
| The Four necessary Elements of Habitat
Suitable habitat for the manatee (as well as for any living being) must provide four basic elements: Food: Considering the amount that manatees eat, suitable habitat must provide an abundance of aquatic plants to sustain the manatees using an area. Water: Manatee intake of water occurs while eating aquatic plants as well as drinking. Recent research suggests that manatees in salt water do not need to drink fresh water for extended periods. This may explain why manatees can go so easily from fresh to salt water environments. Currently, researchers are studying manatees in salt water who are fed a natural sea grass diet to analyze how these animals deal with a strictly marine habitat. Space: Manatees require space to move about. They are migratory and the space (range) they require is influenced by seasonal change. Travel corridors, or passageways, are necessary for the manatee to move back and forth between summer and winter habitats. (It has been documented that many manatees have preferred habitats that they return to year after year.) Shelter: Manatees must have safe, protected areas - away from harassment, boat traffic, strong current, etc. If any of the four elements are missing, manatees cannot survive. And, indeed, manatees are dying as a result of the loss of these elements. Shelter, for one, continues to be harder and harder to find. As a result, manatees are using less favorable habitat where high boat traffic and harassment occur. |
Habitat Activities
|
| To Next Section - The Hydrologic Cycle |
||
| Back to |
Back to |
Back to |