Monday

December 13, 2014


Today Emily and I were hypnotized, mesmerized and bewitched by manatees at Blue Springs State Park about an hour northwest of Titusville, where FLICKA is tied up at the Westland Marina awaiting haul out. Titusville is near Cape Canaveral and the Kennedy Space Center. They love their astronauts down here. Titusville is home to the Astronaut Hall of Fame and NASA attractions (National Aeronautics and Space Administration).                     

Florida has many unique natural features, including a number of fresh water springs that issue forth crystal clear water at a constant year round temperature of 71 to 75 degrees F. These springs are a hit with scuba divers and swimmers and manatees – which were here first.

Blue Springs, an hour northwest of Titusville, is one of these. This spring has, as its source, a nearly circular pool about 100 feet in diameter and 30 feet deep. One hundred million gallons of blue-green tinted water flows daily from it into the St. Johns River. The spring run to the St. Johns River is about a mile long, maybe a quarter mile wide and very deep in places.
 
 
The Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris), a subspecies of the West Indian manatee, is, oddly enough, more closely related to elephants than other marine or aquatic mammals. Go figure. This native, tropical animal has roamed Florida’s coastal and inland waters for God knows how long. During the summer months at least some of the 3,500 to 5,000 remaining individuals range northward as far as Georgia, returning to Florida in the winter. They will not venture into any waters lower than 68 degrees. Smart critters them guys are!

Blue Springs is one of their winter havens. I bet they have been coming here for tens if not hundreds of thousands of years. Think about that for a moment.
 
 
In addition to Florida’s springs, these days they also seek out areas around power plants, which discharge heated water as part of their normal operations. During the winter they bask in these warm waters, lazily cuddling up to one another and feeding on local aquatic vegetation, doing what manatees do – which seems to be a whole lot of nothing most of the time.

The latest count at Blue Spring is somewhere around 140 individuals. Of course now a days the manatees share these springs with human beings, Blue Springs having become a swimming mecca to thousands annually. Fortunately swimming is not allowed during the specific time when the manatees are present in the winter months. (Thank God for those onerous, freedom robbing guvmit regulators.)
 
 
These animals are big. They are referred to, unattractively I think, as sea cows. A large adult might go ten - twelve feet and weigh 1,200 – 1,500 lbs. Calves are 70 lbs. or so and maybe 4 feet long. They are surprisingly agile and, anthropomorphically speaking, act rather playfully. We watched them swim slowly and gracefully in loose formations of two to five animals. Sometimes a pair seemed to be cuddling and one of the pair would place its flipper on the other and sort of hitch a ride. Occasionally they would surface to breathe (being mammals and all) and sometimes roll over onto their backs, behavior reminiscent of sea otters I have seen in other parts of the world. All in all a docile critter, with a gentle nature and manner. Their face is something only a mother could love.

Manatees are endangered. Sadly, most of the remaining individuals have body scars from boat propellers – primarily power boats but I suspect a few sail boats are probably also culprits.

Scaring is used by state and federal biologists to identify individual manatees. Let me repeat that for effect– most of the remaining individuals of this species on this planet have been scared by boat propellers and that is how we identify each individual – by its own unique scar signature.

All along the intra-coastal water way in this neck of the woods – there are prominent signs announcing that these are manatee waters. The signs caution boaters to be careful and not exceed 25 mph. Twenty-five MPH is fast on the water. A boat doing 25 mph hardly has time to miss these ponderous animals who swim slowly along just below the water’s surface. I’m not sure what the rationale is for that speed limit.

The good news is that dedicated natural resource managers in these parts are working on manatee conservation and lots of citizen volunteers’ help implement manatee education programs for the public.  At Blue Springs Park at the end of the “manatee walk’ was a display table manned by a group of volunteers who inform people about manatee status and encourage folks to get involved with the conservation effort. They are amazing people – very dedicated to their cause.

So anyway – that’s my manatee story and I’m sticking to it.

God bless these people.
 
 

Lately I have been thinking and reading about Earth’s threatened and endangered plants and animals. Most of us have general knowledge about that subject, but when you start to dig a little and become a little better educated about basic ecological principles, the impact of human activities on plant and animal populations becomes suddenly a much larger, compelling and important subject I think. By many accounts I have studied, many animal and plant species are on the brink of extinction. Looking down the road, and if some predictions are correct, I can’t help to wonder what the world will be like without them. Maybe it doesn’t matter. I have never seem a white rhinoceros or lion or springbok or, for that matter, most of the animals biologists tell us are endangered or threatened, but the sadness I felt when I recently learned that there are only 5 white rhinos left on earth was real enough.  

Can we somehow live on this planet with other species besides those we have domesticated? So far evidence suggests that we are not able to do that. Many of the world’s species have become extinct on our watch and numbers of many other species are fast dwindling. Much of the overall story and current picture is disheartening.

However, there is a cadre of remarkable scientists, natural resource managers and citizen activists working world wide to improve this dismal picture and in some cases, there are teams of people protecting the last few remaining members of some species – like New Zealand’s kakapo (I know, go ahead and laugh.). The kakapo, a large, flightless, nocturnal New Zealand parrot, was once was a common bird on New Zealand’s islands, but today there are one hundred and twenty-six individuals left, those individuals having been captured and ‘translocated’ to three small, remote predator-free islands. The kakapo population has been ravaged by introduced cats, opossums, rats and stoats (a kind of weasel).

By the way – here is an interesting pearl – New Zealand never had a native population of mammals of any kind (except for a few bats). Any mammal on New Zealand’s islands is an exotic (except for those damn bats) and they have played hell on the native plants and animals. Because of the lack of mammalian species in New Zealand prior to human habitation, bird species flourished there. Of course that is no longer true because once predacious mammals were introduced the birds began dropping – well - like flies. A number of moa species (large flightless birds) are gone and the kiwi (another flightless bird) is threatened. New Zealand had a thing for evolving flightlessness in birds, after all if there aren’t any predators why expend all that energy flying around. [Information about New Zealand extracted from a recent article in the New Yorker, December 22, 29, 2014. The Big Kill, New Zealand’s invasive mammal species, by Elizabeth Kolbert.

I recommend two very well researched and written books on the broad subject of animal extinction.

The first is No Way Home: the Decline of the World’s Great Animal Migrations by Princeton Professor of Public Affairs, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, David S. Wilcove. Dr. Wilcove chronicles stories of the demise of large land and marine mammals, insects, amphibians and other animals and addresses reasons for those declines.

The second – The Sixth Extinction – an Unnatural History by Elizabeth Kolbert, New York staff writer for the New Yorker magazine. Ms. Kolbert talks about the world’s known periods of animal and plant extinctions, the first five being caused by ‘natural’ events and the sixth which we are living through the latest and largest in scope and depth, largely caused by human activities. She writes with equal passion about the people trying to save engendered species and the species themselves.

So Emily and I ended up our day by driving back down to Titusville, and visiting, for a second time, the 140,000 acre Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, an area of coastal dunes, saltwater estuaries and marshes, freshwater impoundments, scrub, pine flatwoods, and hardwood hammocks that provide habitat for more than 1,500 species of plants and animals.

We drove the 12 mile Black Point Wildlife Trail and noted the following bird species: American Widgeon, Northern Shoveler, Hooded Merganger, Wood stork, Double Crested Cormorant, White Pelican, Brown Pelican, Pied-billed Grebe, Great Blue Heron, Great Egret, Tricolored Heron, Reddish Egret, Cattle Egret, Royal Tern, White and Glossy Ibis, Roseate Spoonbill, Black Vulture, Turkey Vulture, Common Gallinule, Ring billed and Laughing Gulls, Fish Crow, Common and Boat-tailed Grackles and American Coot and many old coots doing what we were doing – just hanging around.  

Namaste’

No comments:

Post a Comment