Current:Home > FinanceFlorida discontinues manatee winter feeding program after seagrass conditions improve -Financium
Florida discontinues manatee winter feeding program after seagrass conditions improve
View
Date:2025-04-16 04:15:33
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — A two-year experimental feeding program for starving Florida manatees will not immediately resume this winter as conditions have improved for the threatened marine mammals and the seagrass on which they depend, wildlife officials said.
Thousands of pounds of lettuce were fed to manatees that typically gather in winter months near the warm-water discharge of a power plant on Florida’s east coast. State and federal wildlife officials launched the program after pollution killed off vast seagrass beds, leading to a record of over 1,100 manatee deaths in 2021.
This season, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service determined the seagrass has started to recover in key winter foraging areas on the east coast, and that there appear to be fewer manatees in poor physical condition going into the stressful colder months.
“After careful consideration, the agencies are not providing manatees with a supplemental food source at the beginning of the winter season,” the FWC said Friday in a notice on its website. “However, staff developed a contingency plan which they will implement if needed.”
Last year, more than 400,000 pounds (181,000 kilograms) of lettuce, most of it donated, was fed to manatees near the power plant in Cocoa, Florida.
Manatees are gentle, round-tailed giants sometimes known as sea cows that weigh as much as 1,200 pounds (550 kilograms) and can live as long as 65 years. Manatees are Florida’s official state marine mammal but are listed as a threatened species, also facing peril from boat strikes and toxic red tide algae outbreaks along the state’s Gulf coast. Their closest living relative is the elephant.
The starvation problem — something the wildlife agencies call an “unusual mortality event” — has been traced to nitrogen, phosphorus and sewage pollution from agriculture, urban runoff and other sources that trigger algae blooms, which in turn kill off the seagrass that manatees and other sea creatures rely upon.
Millions of state and federal dollars are being poured into dozens of projects ranging from stormwater treatment upgrades to filter systems that remove harmful nitrates from water that goes into the Indian River Lagoon, the huge east coast estuary where manatees congregate in winter. Seagrass beds have been replanted.
There have been 505 manatee deaths recorded between Jan. 1 and Nov. 24 this year. That compares with 748 over the same time frame in 2022 and 1,027 the year before that, according to the wildlife commission. The Florida manatee overall population is estimated at between 8,350 and 11,730 animals.
The agencies are not ready to declare the starvation problem solved and intend to closely monitor manatees and their environment to decide whether feeding or other steps are needed.
“Feeding wild animals is a temporary emergency intervention and conservation measures like habitat restoration, improving habitat access, and increasing capacity for rehabilitation are considered long-term solutions,” the Florida wildlife agency said in its notice.
Meanwhile, environmental groups are pushing to have the manatee again listed as an endangered species, a higher classification than threatened that provides greater protections. A petition seeking the change filed with the Fish and Wildlife Service contends it was an error to take manatees off the endangered list in 2017, where they had been since 1973.
The service made an initial finding in October that placing the manatee back on the endangered list may be warranted, an interim step that requires further review. Environmental groups say the move is encouraging.
“This is the right call for manatees and everyone who cares about these charming creatures,” said Ragan Whitlock, a Florida-based attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “I applaud the Fish and Wildlife Service for taking the next step toward increased safeguards. Manatees need every ounce of protection they can get.”
veryGood! (48)
Related
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Georgia agency gets 177,000 applications for housing aid, but only has 13,000 spots on waiting list
- Bee pollen for breast growth went viral, but now TikTokers say they're paying the price
- Mother of Muslim boy stabbed to death in alleged hate crime issues 1st remarks
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Mike Johnson, a staunch conservative from Louisiana, is elected House speaker with broad GOP support
- Gay marriage is legal in Texas. A justice who won't marry same-sex couples heads to court anyway
- Why Derick Dillard Threatened Jill Duggar's Dad Jim Bob With Protective Order
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Food insecurity shot up last year with inflation and the end of pandemic-era aid, a new report says
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Video shows Florida man finding iguana in his toilet: 'I don't know how it got there'
- 'A Christmas Story' house sold in Cleveland ahead of film's 40th anniversary. Here's what's next.
- California school district offering substitute teachers $500 per day to cross teachers' picket line
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- A century after her birth, opera great Maria Callas is honored with a new museum in Greece
- Pope’s big synod on church future produces first document, but differences remain over role of women
- After off-duty Alaska Airlines pilot is accused of crash attempt, an air safety expert weighs in on how airlines screen their pilots
Recommendation
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
British leader Rishi Sunak marks a year in office with little to celebrate
Mississippi should set minimum wage higher than federal level, says Democrat running for governor
A new RSV shot could help protect babies this winter — if they can get it in time
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
Hong Kong cuts taxes for foreign home buyers and stock traders as it seeks to maintain global status
5 Things podcast: Blinken urges 'humanitarian pauses' but US won't back ceasefire in Gaza
The US is sharing hard lessons from urban combat in Iraq and Syria as Israel prepares to invade Gaza