Florida is very proud of its manatees. It has a county named after them and has pictures of them on license plates. These gentle creatures are part of Florida culture. But recent research indicates that manatees – also known as sea cows – might only be relatively recent residents of the Sunshine State.
Manatees have been spotted in Florida waters for several centuries but might have only been tourists visiting briefly before returning to their home waters in the Caribbean in places like Cuba.
The new research suggests that manatees might not have actually taken up residence in Florida until after Europeans colonized the area in the 1500s. There is a rarity of manatee bones on archaeological sites that date back further. It was particularly striking that Crystal River, which is an epicenter for modern manatee populations, had little evidence of their presence in earlier times.
Even into the early 1900s, Florida newspaper reports treated manatee sightings as a spectacle rather than a common occurrence. In the 1920s and 1930s, there started to be more routine sightings in places like yacht basins and canal harbors. In the 1950s, manatees became more plentiful in Tampa Bay and Crystal River. The warming waters and human activities creating shallow warm water refuges increased manatee populations, particularly near places like power plants.
The current Florida manatee population is between 8,000 and 12,000 and is classified as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, an improvement over its previous endangered status. But pollution is killing a lot of the seagrass that they eat, and their safety is by no means assured.
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Why manatees are likely not Florida natives
Photo, posted March 25, 2012, courtesy of David Hinkel / USFWS via Flickr.
Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio