Florida Manatees to Receive Nearly 2 Million Acres of Revised Protected Habitat

Florida Manatees to Receive Nearly 2 Million Acres of Revised Protected Habitat

It's a great day for Manatees!

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed a revised critical habitat plan that would protect 1,904,191 acres of critical habitat for the Florida manatee, as well as 78,121 acres for the Antillean manatee in Puerto Rico. Their habitat hasn’t been updated since they were originally protected under the Endangered Species Act in 1976.

“Manatees have waited nearly 15 years for the Fish and Wildlife Service to fulfill its promise to update these lifesaving habitat protections, so this is a big win for the species,” said Ragan Whitlock, a Florida-based attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity. “Officials recently resorted to emergency feeding trials to try to keep these animals from starving to death from seagrass declines. Truly protecting the manatees’ home, including their seagrass food source, is the most important step on their road to recovery.”

Today’s proposal follows a legal agreement with the Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife and Save the Manatee Club.

The proposed rule highlights the importance of natural warm-water sites and ample seagrass forage. Previous habitat designations were brief and failed to specify acreage amounts for the habitat protected. The previous designation was also issued before the Endangered Species Act required identification of physical or biological features essential to the manatees’ recovery.

“For too long, we have degraded and destroyed the Florida manatee’s habitat through pollution, dredging and blocking access to the natural warm water springs vital to its winter survival,” said Jane Davenport, a senior attorney at Defenders of Wildlife. “When finalized, the proposed critical habitat expansion will give federal, state and conservation groups the information and impetus to ensure the beloved Florida manatee’s full recovery.”

A record-setting 1,100 Florida manatees died in 2021, and more than half of those deaths were linked to water pollution in the Indian River Lagoon. This unusual mortality event is considered ongoing. More than 130 manatee calves have died to date in 2024, putting the animals on track to double the five-year average for deaths of recently born manatees. As research into calf deaths continues, biologists have warned of malnutrition’s long-lasting health effects.

“The warning signs that the risks and threats to the very survival of imperiled manatees were escalating towards a catastrophic collapse were ignored for far too long,” said Patrick Rose, aquatic biologist and executive director of Save the Manatee Club. “At a time when the Fish and Wildlife Service should have been working to prevent the imminent loss of thousands of acres of the manatees’ critical habitat, the out of touch agency was busy downlisting the manatees from endangered to threatened. Finally, on the heels of these devastating and unprecedented losses to both the manatees’ critical habitat and the manatee population as a whole, the Service has begun to take steps to stem the bleeding in a world of escalating threats. The Service must now see the job through!”

The Center, along with Save the Manatee Club, Wildlife Advocacy Project and Defenders of Wildlife, petitioned the Service in 2008 to revise critical habitat for the Florida manatee. The agency found in 2010 that revisions to critical habitat were warranted but failed to act for more than 14 years. The groups filed suit in February 2022 to challenge the delay.

Animals with federally protected critical habitat are more than twice as likely to move toward recovery than species without it. Federal agencies that fund or permit projects in critical habitat are required to consult with the Service to ensure this habitat is not harmed or destroyed by their actions.

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Florida manatee, Trichechus manatus latirostrus, Jim Reid, USFWS. 

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.7 million members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

Save the Manatee Club is an international nonprofit based in Florida with its mission to protect manatees and their aquatic habitat for future generations. The Club was founded in 1981 by former Florida Governor and U.S. Senator Bob Graham and singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett to protect and advocate on behalf of the species. Today, Save the Manatee Club is the world’s leading manatee conservation organization. To learn more about the world’s leading voice for manatees, visit savethemanatee.org

Source: Center for Biological Diversity