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US authorities probing alarming spike in manatee deaths
by AFP Staff Writers
Miami (AFP) March 26, 2021

US authorities are investigating an alarming increase in manatee deaths in Florida, after the bodies of more than 500 of the giant marine mammals have been found so far this year -- 349 more than died in all of 2020.

Nearly 540 dead manatees were found in Florida waters just between January 1 and March 19, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC).

That is almost as many manatee deaths as were counted in the last three years combined. About 175 manatees usually die in Florida every year.

The FWC said in a statement Wednesday that the situation could now be classed as an Unusual Mortality Event (UME).

"Preliminary information indicates that a reduction in food availability is a contributing factor," the commission's statement said.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, a UME is defined as event that "involves a significant die-off of any marine mammal population; and demands immediate response," in accordance with the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

"The FWC will continue to coordinate closely with our federal partners, participate in the investigative team and conduct analyses into the cause of the UME," the agency said.

Many of these "sea cows," as they are sometimes known thanks to their size and docile nature, have been found in a state of malnourishment along the central and southern stretch of Florida's Atlantic coast.

"While the investigation is ongoing, initial assessments indicate the high number of emaciated manatees is likely due to a decline in food availability," the FWC said. "Seagrass and macro algae coverage in this region and specifically in the Indian River Lagoon has declined significantly."

Water pollution can cause an excess of algae blooms, which then impede the sun from being able to reach the seagrass the manatees eat -- the plants die and the animals lose a food source.

In cold winter months, manatees are known to congregate in large numbers in the shallow waters of rivers and deltas, looking for warmer temperatures. They depend on seagrass to survive during this time.

The current Florida manatee population numbers more than 7,500.

"This event, as best we can determine, is an isolated case. We can't with an confidence say that the whole manatee population is at risk," said Larry Killmar, chief zoological officer at ZooTampa at Lowry Park on Florida's west coast, home to a manatee critical care center.

"We need the science to tell us what is going on," he said.

Manatees were re-classified from an endangered species to a threatened species in May 2017, early in former president Donald Trump's term.

The change reduced the level of protection the mammals were entitled to.


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WATER WORLD
Warming drives 'fundamental' changes to ocean, scientists warn
Paris March 24, 2021
Climate change has wrought major changes to ocean stability faster than previously thought, according to a study published Wednesday, raising alarms over its role as a global thermostat and the marine life it supports. The research published in the journal Nature looked at 50 years of data and followed the way in which surface water "decouples" from the deeper ocean. Climate change has disrupted ocean mixing, a process that helps store away most of the world's excess heat and a significant prop ... read more

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