Manatee | Diet, Habitat, & Facts (2024)

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Also known as: Trichechus

Written by

Thomas O'Shea Wildlife Biologist, Midcontinent Ecological Science Center, United States Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado. Former deputy chair, Sirenian Specialist Group, International Union for Conservation of Nature...

Thomas O'Shea

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Last Updated: Article History

West Indian manatees (

Trichechus manatus)

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Related Topics:
West African manatee
Amazonian manatee
Caribbean manatee
Florida manatee
Antillean manatee

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manatee, (genus Trichechus), any of three species of large slow aquatic mammals found along tropical and subtropical Atlantic coasts and associated inland waters, including the watersheds of the Amazon and Niger rivers. Dull gray, blackish, or brown in colour, all three manatee species have stout tapered bodies ending in a flat rounded tail used for forward propulsion. The forelimbs are modified into flippers; there are no hind limbs.

The Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris), which is also found seasonally in the waters of nearby states, is one subspecies of the West Indian manatee (T. manatus). The other subspecies lives in nearshore waters, lagoons, estuaries, and rivers of eastern Mexico, down the Central American coast, and across northern South America. It also occurs around the Greater Antilles islands of the Caribbean—hence its common name, the Antillean manatee (T. manatus manatus).

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The Amazonian manatee (T. inunguis) inhabits the Amazon River and associated drainage areas, including seasonally inundated forests. This species lives only in fresh water and can be found far inland through Brazil to Ecuador, Peru, and Colombia. The West African manatee (T. senegalensis), found in coastal areas and slow-moving rivers from Senegal to Angola, also ranges far inland in some rivers.

Form and function

Florida manatees generally grow to around 3 metres (10 feet) but range in length from about 2.5 to 3.9 metres (8 to 13 feet) and weigh up to 1,655 kg (3,650 pounds). The Antillean subspecies is very similar but is distinguishable from the Florida manatee by measurement differences of cranial characters between the species. West African manatees closely resemble West Indian manatees and are similar in size. Amazonian manatees are smaller, reaching a length of 2.8 metres (9.2 feet) and a weight of 480 kg (1,056 pounds), and, unlike the other two species, they are darker gray in colour, commonly have a white patch on the chest, and lack nails on the flippers. The flippers are used by all species for swimming, turning, bottom walking, and manipulating food.

Manatees are uniquely adapted for eating aquatic plants. The manatee’s large lips are prehensile and studded with specialized sensory bristles and hairs (vibrissae) for discriminating between and manipulating food plants. Compared with the fish and krill eaten by other marine mammals, most aquatic plants are low in energy value and protein. Manatees must therefore eat large amounts of this bulky, low-energy food to satisfy their dietary requirements. To handle such a diet, manatees are hindgut digesters (like horses) and have intestines as long as 30 metres (100 feet). The teeth have also evolved in response to dietary demands. To counter abrasion from ingested sand and silica, manatees constantly grow new molars. These teeth progress from the rear of the jaws forward as older, worn teeth drop out at the front of the mouth. Unlike almost all other mammals, tooth replacement occurs throughout life.

Taxonomy

  • Kingdom: Animalia

  • Class: Mammalia

  • Order: Sirenia

  • Family: Trichechidae

  • Genus: Trichechus

All three species (T. inunguis, T. manatus, and T. senegalensis) are classified as Vulnerable Species.

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The lungs are oriented parallel to the water’s surface, and the ribs lack marrow, which makes them unusually dense and heavy. These traits, along with the manatee’s ability to control the volume of small air spaces in the lungs, permit the animal to maintain a horizontal orientation anywhere in the water from the bottom to the surface. Manatees can remain submerged for up to 20 minutes. With each breath they replenish about 90 percent of the air in the lungs. (Humans, by contrast, replenish only about 10 percent.) This set of diverse adaptations enables foraging on a variety of plant forms, including submerged sea grasses, floating plants, mangrove leaves, and grasses along banks.

Manatees have unusually low metabolic rates, which probably makes possible their long fasting periods and subsistence on low-energy food. Although they can deposit large stores of fat, manatees’ capacity to generate and retain body heat in cool water is poor. The brain is very small in comparison with those of other mammals of similar body size. Although the cerebrum lacks marked convolutions, the proportion of the brain devoted to higher functions is comparable to that of primates.

Natural history

Manatees are active day and night and can sleep submerged or while breathing at the water’s surface. They are primarily solitary but form small transient groups for periods of hours or days. Aggregations of up to 20 males may form mating herds centred on a receptive female; other temporary aggregations may form at feeding areas, freshwater seeps, or warm water sources. During extreme cold spells in Florida, aggregations of 300 or more have been observed in the warm water outflows of power plants. Many Florida manatees also migrate southward during winter. Amazonian manatees migrate in response to water-level fluctuations associated with rainy and dry seasons. When surrounding waters recede, they can become isolated in pools but are able to fast for up to seven months in these situations by slowly metabolizing stored fat. Manatees, particularly mothers and calves, communicate by sound, producing faint underwater chirps, squeaks, and grunts. Manatees also engage in tactile contact (touch reception) by using sensory hairs scattered across the body, especially the hairs and bristles of the muzzle.

The Florida manatee is a symbol for conservation and an extremely popular animal with the public. Some wild manatees become accustomed to humans and will swim among snorkelers and anchored boats, seeking to be rubbed and scratched. Tourists and residents alike seek encounters with manatees in the wild or visit zoos and aquaria to view captives. Florida manatees have been the subject of much research, and most information on manatees is based on studies of this subspecies, but all manatees probably share many aspects of natural history. Beyond their ecotourism appeal, manatees have been used to control aquatic weeds in parts of their range, but in Florida this is no longer considered feasible because of the fast rate of plant growth in comparison with the number of manatees required for consuming them.

Manatees are long-lived and reproduce slowly. Age estimates based on growth rings in ear bones indicate life spans of up to 59 years, and at least one manatee has survived more than 69 years in captivity. Females produce one calf every two to three years, with twins occurring rarely. Although they begin eating plants when very young, calves accompany mothers for up to two years, nursing from teats located at the base of the flippers. Sexual maturity occurs as young as three years, with gestation taking about a year or slightly longer. In Florida, reproduction occurs year-round, with seasonal birth and mating peaks in spring and lows in winter.

Conservation status

The manatee life cycle has important implications for the conservation of their populations. Records of predation on manatees are extremely rare, and the greatest source of mortality worldwide is humans. Although manatees are protected by law throughout their range, their numbers have diminished because their reproductive rates cannot keep pace with losses from hunting, drowning in fishing nets, and habitat degradation. In Florida, accidental collisions with motorboats and crushing in canal gates have replaced hunting as a major cause of death, some studies estimating that 25–35 percent of all Florida manatee deaths come from collisions with watercraft. All three species of manatees have been listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) since the 1980s. The Amazon and West African manatee populations are estimated at 8,000–30,000 adults and 10,000 adults, respectively. The adult population of Antillean manatees is likely fewer than 2,500 individuals, and the number of adult Florida manatees is thought to be approximately 2,300.

Evolution and paleontology

Manatees are the only living members of the family Trichechidae, which is related to the dugong family, Dugongidae. Both families belong to the order Sirenia, whose closest living relatives are elephants of the order Proboscidea. The fossil ancestors of modern manatees lived during the Miocene Epoch (23 million to 5.3 million years ago), when South America was isolated and the uplifting of the Andes Mountains caused a flourishing of aquatic vegetation, including grasses. The abrasiveness of these plants provided selection forces favouring the unusual manatee tooth-replacement pattern. About one million years ago, their superior teeth probably made it possible for them to prevent ancient members of the dugong family from becoming established in the Atlantic.

Today’s West Indian manatee has changed little compared with its ancestors of the past few million years. The West African manatee is also similar to the ancestral forms and may have dispersed from South America to Africa via transoceanic currents. Amazonian manatees appear to be descendants of Miocene trichechids isolated in a closed interior basin of South America.

Thomas O'Shea
Manatee | Diet, Habitat, & Facts (2024)

FAQs

Manatee | Diet, Habitat, & Facts? ›

Manatees are aquatic herbivores (plant-eaters). Also known as "sea cows

sea cows
साइरेनिया (Sirenia) या समुद्री गाय (sea cow) जल में रहने वाले शाकाहारी स्तनधारी प्राणियों का एक जीववैज्ञानिक गण है जिसके सदस्य नदियों और तट के पास वाले समुद्री क्षेत्रों में रहते हैं। साइरेनिया की चार जीववैज्ञानिक जातियाँ अस्तित्व में हैं, जो दो कुलों और वंशों में विभाजित हैं।
https://hi.wikipedia.org › wiki › साइरेनिया
," these herbivores usually spend up to eight hours a day grazing on seagrasses and other aquatic plants. A manatee can consume from 4 to 9 percent of its body weight in aquatic vegetation daily.

What is the manatee's habitat? ›

Manatees inhabit rivers, bays, canals, estuaries and coastal areas moving freely between fresh, saline and brackish waters. Florida estuaries and freshwater lakes, springs and rivers provide extensive beds of seagrass and abundant freshwater aquatic vegetation that provide the manatee's primary food sources.

What are the habits of manatees? ›

Manatees are gentle and slow-moving animals. Most of their time is spent eating, resting, and traveling. Manatee are mostly herbivorous; however, small fish and invertebrates can sometimes be ingested along with a manatee's normal vegetation diet.

What is the critical habitat of a manatee? ›

Habitat. Manatees live in marine, brackish, and freshwater systems in coastal and riverine areas throughout their range. Preferred habitats include areas near the shore featuring submerged aquatic vegetation like seagrass and eelgrass.

How long does a manatee live? ›

Lifespan: Manatees are thought to live 50 to 60 years in the wild. They may live over 65 years in captivity.

Do manatees come out in the rain? ›

Paired with Capt Jake & Courtney, the A Team, we headed to Three Sisters & hung out with manatees. Yes, it rained, but the water was warmer than the air. None the less we all had a great time. I saw more manatees & calves, though the water was cloudy & murky.

What is a predator of a manatee? ›

Manatees don't really have any real predators. Sharks or killer whales or alligators or crocodiles could eat them, but since they don't usually inhabit the same waters, this is pretty rare. Their biggest threat is from humans. And because of this, all manatee species are endangered and threatened.

Can a manatee live out of water? ›

Manatees never leave the water but, like all marine mammals, they must breathe air at the surface. A resting manatee can remain submerged for up to 15 minutes, but while swimming, it must surface every three or four minutes. This West Indian manatee was photographed at Dallas World Aquarium in Texas.

Do alligators eat manatees? ›

Manatees Have No Natural Predators

Manatees are one of the luckiest ocean animals in that they have no natural predators. Although crocodiles, sharks, killer whales, and alligators can kill manatees when they are underwater eating, it doesn't happen often. That's because they prefer different habitats.

What do manatees love? ›

Manatees love swimming or floating around in the spring waters while munching on the sea grasses and other marine vegetation. Manatees may look all fat and bubbly, but in reality, they have much less fat under their skin, which means they can't stay warm on their own during the cold winters.

Do manatees have a purpose? ›

They also play an important role in maintaining a healthy ecosystem. Manatees eat a LOT of sea grass. By doing so, they keep the grass short, which helps maintain the health of the sea grass beds. While manatees don't have any true natural predators, they have still become endangered.

What is the biggest threat to manatees? ›

The worst threats to manatees are habitat degradation, loss of food sources, loss or lack of access to warm-water sites during the winter, entanglements, and watercraft collisions, said Lisa Thompson, a spokeswoman for the state wildlife agency.

Why are manatees illegal to touch? ›

Despite their docile appearance, it is important to recognize that manatees are wild animals. Any contact with humans—even those who are well-intentioned—could injure them or alter their natural behavior. This is manatee harassment, and it is punishable by law.

Do manatees mate for life? ›

They reproduce sexually, and males start following the female around after she is able to breed. They do not stay with her after mating. The gestation period for a manatee is twelve to fourteen months. Manatees are mammals, so they give live birth, and nurse their young.

What is the Anableps habitat? ›

anableps inhabits the coastlines of the Caribbean island of Trinidad and northern South America, from Venezuela to the muddy mouth of the Amazon. It prefers the brackish (somewhat salty) water of coastal mangrove forests and estuaries, but can also survive upstream in freshwater creeks and rivers.

What is the habitat of the magicicada? ›

Magicicada septendecula prefers ovipositing in hickories and walnuts, and emerges in higher proportions under those trees than under comparable oaks. Both M. septendecim and M. septendecula occur together in upland woods, but septendecim exhibits much less host specificity than septendecula.

How many manatees are left? ›

How many manatees are left? Last fall, the manatee population in Florida was estimated at 8,350 to 11,730, based on an assessment from 2021 to 2022. The global population of manatees is estimated to be at a minimum of 13,000, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

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