Title: Sirenews
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Permanent Link: http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00099157/00017
 Material Information
Title: Sirenews newsletter of the IUCNSSC Sirenia Specialist Group
Alternate Title: Siren news
Physical Description: v. : ; 29 cm.
Language: English
Creator: International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources -- Sirenia Specialist Group
International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources -- Sirenia Specialist Group
Publisher: IUCN/SSC Sirenia Specialist Group
Place of Publication: Washington D.C
Washington D.C
Publication Date: April 1992
Frequency: two no. a year[apr. 1984-]
semiannual
regular
 Subjects
Subject: Sirenia -- Periodicals   ( lcsh )
Marine mammals -- Periodicals   ( lcsh )
Genre: periodical   ( marcgt )
 Notes
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references.
Additional Physical Form: Also issued via the World Wide Web.
Dates or Sequential Designation: No. 1 (Apr. 1984)-
Issuing Body: Supported 1984-Apr. 1992 by the Species Survival Commission of IUCN, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission; Oct. 1992 by the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission & U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Apr. 1993-Oct. 1994 by the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission; <Oct. 1995>- by the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission and Sea World, Inc.
General Note: Title from caption.
General Note: Latest issue consulted: No. 48 (Oct. 2007).
 Record Information
Bibliographic ID: UF00099157
Volume ID: VID00017
Source Institution: University of Florida
Holding Location: University of Florida
Rights Management: All rights reserved by the source institution and holding location.
Resource Identifier: oclc - 35841617
lccn - 2009208704
issn - 1017-3439

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NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


IN THIS ISSUE: ENCOURAGING RESULTS FROM FLORIDA MANATEE
CENSUS (p. 5)

DUGONG RESEARCH IN THE PHILIPPINES AND
THAILAND (pp. 8, 9)


EDITORIAL: THE ENDANGERED RIO SUMMIT

The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (the so-called Earth
Summit) is now only a few weeks away. At this writing it appears that many of the hopes
for this unprecedented meeting will be dashed. The great gathering in Rio de Janeiro is in acute
danger of degenerating into a media show, largely devoid of substance in the form of binding
international treaties to protect the environment. Much of the blame for this belongs to one
government that of the United States of America.
The U.S. is the only nation on Earth that stands in the way of an international global warming
treaty, refusing to pledge to reduce or even stabilize its emissions of greenhouse gases. The
Bush administration has shown some movement on this issue in recent weeks, but not nearly
enough. What is needed is a binding commitment to a 20% reduction of carbon dioxide
emissions by the year 2000. The National Resources Defense Council and other energy
advocacy groups have estimated that such a policy, far from demanding a major sacrifice on the
part of Americans, would actually save the U.S. $2.3 trillion over 40 years.

At a moment when dramatic and visible leadership are called for, not only in the national
interest but in the planetary interest, President Bush has only belatedly and reluctantly
agreed to attend the Rio summit. This disappointing performance merely leads the long list of
environmental issues on which effective American leadership has been sorely lacking -
ranging from increased energy efficiency at home, to debt relief and increased aid for the
developing world, to an effective response to the root problem of overpopulation.
Unfortunately, leaders do not always appear in the moment of need. As the U.S.
approaches a national election, neither political party appears capable of meeting the challenge
to think anew and act anew.
Fortunately, in society as in science, revolutions sometimes come not from lone, charismatic
leaders but from the ranks of ordinary individuals who come to share a common vision of a
better way. These people will be represented at Rio by a wide variety of non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), which will be holding their own forum in parallel with the meeting of
heads of government and hopefully pressuring the latter to act responsibly. Many of this




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


newsletter's readers belong to one or more of these NGOs; all of us should be involved in
these activities. As scientists and citizens, we must continue to sound the alarm, today and long
after the Rio summit, over what is happening to our world. We must seize every
opportunity to convince other ordinary people that we may, can, and must take responsibility
for, and control of, what our societies are doing.
As sirenologists, we can speak authoritatively about a group of endangered species which
are increasingly well-known and popular among the public worldwide, and on which the
impacts of human activities can be vividly demonstrated. The message is getting out. Even
organizations such as Zero Population Growth are now citing the death toll of Florida
manatees as a prime example of human-caused environmental havoc.
The Rio summit may fizzle out in futility, at least it will probably fall short of its goals. This
will be the fault of the greedy elites of both North and South, who wish to go on profiting
at the expense of the needy majority and of Earth itself. But the resulting, well-deserved
reproach to the U.S. government and other obstructors of global sanity will itself bear
eloquent witness to how far we have yet to go as eloquent as any mangled manatee. DPD


AERIAL SURVEYS FOR SIRENIA: WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

I spent the first five weeks of this year as a guest of the Sirenia Project in Gainesville,
Florida. The workshop on the population biology of the Florida manatee in the last week of my
stay was the highlight of my very fruitful, interesting and enjoyable visit.
The workshop reviewed most aspects of manatee population ecology through a series of
working groups, each of which reviewed a specific topic. I was surprised at the consensus.
There was strong agreement that the lack of an accurate population estimate for the Florida
manatee is the major obstacle to evaluating its status.
Workshop participants were not optimistic about the suitability of using the data base
on scarred animals for estimating absolute abundance. So we will probably have to
continue relying on aerial surveys to obtain information on the sizes of sirenian populations.
Most aerial surveys for sirenians still use techniques developed in the 1970's. Animals
are usually counted from aircraft flying at fixed heights and parallel to shore. If a large
group is detected, a count is made while the aircraft circles. Such surveys assume that
sirenians mainly occur close to shore, although in some studies additional transects are flown
over areas where suitable habitat is known to extend further offshore. No corrections are made
for animals which are not seen by observers.
This technique has proved very useful for identifying major areas of inshore sirenian
habitat, especially in developing countries where its ease of implementation is an
advantage. However, the method is of limited use in large embayments and areas where the
continental shelf is broad, particularly in the case of dugongs which tend to be more coastal than
manatees.




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


The method is also unsuitable for tracking temporal changes in abundance, especially at large
spatial scales, because:
a) The number of animals sighted is dependent on their distribution relative to the
shoreline, which can be very variable.
b) The sampling fraction is probably variable.
c) The method yields a count without a standard error.
d) The method has no mechanism for compensating for changes in the visibility
biases.
The fixed-width survey technique was developed for use at large spatial scales (tens of
thousands of square km) and has been used successfully for dugongs in Australia and the
Arabian region. The technique incorporates methods for estimating perception bias
(animals that are visible but missed) and standardizing for availability bias (animals that are
unavailable due to water turbidity). This technique provides a repeatable, standardized
minimum population estimate and is useful for producing density distribution maps, for
monitoring trends in abundance over large spatial scales and long time periods, and for
assessing the likely impact of direct anthropogenic mortality. However, even at large spatial
scales, the population estimates produced by the technique have a precision of 12% at best,
which means that it would take at least a decade to detect a low-level chronic decline in
abundance. The precision of the population estimate is negatively correlated with the
population size, which means that it would take even longer to detect changes in smaller
populations (or at smaller spatial scales).
Tim Gerrodette of the Southwest Fisheries Center in La Jolla, California, has done
simulations which indicate that for populations in the low hundreds of animals, the most
likely outcome of any series of surveys will be a non-significant trend even when the population
is actually declining.
Thus it will probably be impossible to detect trends in most sirenian populations. Even in
areas such as Australia where densities are relatively high, it will not be possible to detect
trends in localized areas of impact.
In most areas, a demographic approach will be more productive. We know from
population models of other mammals with similar life histories that the crude death rate of
stable populations is likely to be between two and ten percent per year. Provided an accurate
population estimate is available, this allows us to estimate a sustainable level of mortality for
a sirenian population, or at least to put estimates of anthropogenic mortality in
perspective. For example, on the basis of his experience in two Aboriginal communities,
Andrew Smith estimated that their combined take of dugongs was substantially less than the
sustainable yield of the associated dugong population, which I estimated to be on the order of
8,000 animals using a very conservative correction for availability bias. When I repeated the
survey five years later, the estimated population estimate had increased slightly (but not
significantly). I am optimistic that we were correct in advising the management agencies
that the hunting should be allowed to continue.




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


Where do we go from here? The biggest obstacle to obtaining accurate estimates of sirenian
abundance is lack of a method of compensating for the variable proportion of the animals which
are invisible to observers due to water turbidity. I have made a first attempt to do this for
dugongs, but improvements are needed.
I believe that we should be putting a great deal of effort into obtaining data which will allow
us to model the diving and surfacing behavior of dugongs and manatees under a range of
conditions. These models could then be used to calculate appropriate corrections for
availability bias so that accurate population estimates can be obtained.
Lack of accurate population estimates is a major obstacle to the evaluation of the status of all
sirenians, not just Florida manatees. Helene Marsh


LOCAL NEWS

CARIBBEAN REGION

International Conservation Agreement. Recently a second Protocol was added to the
Convention for the Protection and Development of the Marine Environment in the Wider
Caribbean Region: the Protocol Concerning Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife (SPAW).
This Protocol was adopted in two stages: its text on 18 January 1990 and the initial versions of
its three Annexes on 11 June 1991. The Annexes list protected marine and coastal flora
(Annex I), fauna (Annex II), and species to be maintained at a sustainable level (Annex III).
The Protocol will enter into force following ratification by nine Contracting Parties.
The Conference of Plenipotentiaries for the adoption of these annexes, which was
convened in Kingston, Jamaica, 10-11 June 1991, adopted the draft annexes in their entirety,
and showed the region's commitment to a strong Protocol by listing entire groups of species,
such as most corals, all mangroves, all sea turtles, and major groups of sea mammals. Listed
under Annex II are all species of Cetacea, Sirenia, and Phocidae. Listed under Annex III are
all mangroves and a number of species of seagrasses.
The first meeting of the Interim Scientific and Technical Advisory Committee to the
Protocol will be held in Kingston, 4-8 May 1992. The agenda will include protection of
manatees as well as other threatened species. (Sources: UNEP Caribbean Environment
Programme, CEPNEWS 5(3), September 1991; Dr. M. M. Kaufmann, Monitor International)

FLORIDA

Synoptic Manatee Aerial Surveys. Another statewide aerial survey of Florida's manatee
population was conducted on January 17 and 18, 1992. Biologists surveyed coastal and river
areas throughout peninsular Florida and four sites in southern Georgia. The survey included
known winter habitats but concentrated on warm-water refuges such as natural springs and




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


power plant discharge canals.
Raw counts based on verbal reports from each participating biologist indicate that a record
1,856 manatees were counted, 907 on the East Coast and 949 on the West Coast. These figures
are preliminary and may be subject to revision.
These results will be used to update information from two statewide surveys conducted in
1991 (See Sirenews No. 15). Those two surveys counted 1,268 and 1,470 manatees,
respectively. Each count provides a minimum count of the population, and is a single event that
cannot be used to reliably estimate population size. Surveys over several years are necessary
to assess the actual status of the population and determine population trends.
We attribute the higher count this year to better (in fact, nearly perfect) survey conditions
such as colder temperatures, improved water clarity, and less wind, rather than a large
increase in the population. The count of 1,856 manatees is about as high as the most optimistic
researchers would have guessed possible three or four years ago. While it of course does not
mean that manatees are no longer endangered, it does give them a little more "breathing room";
the number of mortalities we have been seeing could be better sustained by a population of
that size. In any case, this is the first really good news about manatee population biology in
some years.
The manatee is still considered endangered because total population size is not the only
factor to be considered when determining endangered status. Biologists must also consider
other factors affecting the Florida manatee population, such as low reproductive rates, high
infant mortality rates, high mortality rates from boat collisions and other causes, water
pollution, and loss of habitat. In particular, the record numbers of documented deaths in recent
years remain a major impediment to the recovery of the species. More manatees died from
human-related causes (68) in 1991 than ever before. Likewise, more small ("perinatal")
calves died (53) than ever before. This survey certainly provides no reason to halt any
ongoing manatee conservation strategies.
The Department of Natural Resources would like to thank the 27 biologists representing
14 local, state, and federal agencies, private research groups, and educational institutions as
well as all the other staff who made this survey possible. For example, apart from tasks directly
connected with the survey, other staff had to cover two rescue attempts while the local
biologists were flying the survey. Ten aircraft were in the air simultaneously on the first day,
nine on the second!
The survey was funded largely by the Save the Manatee Trust Fund, which derives its funds
from manatee auto license tag sales, boat registration fees, and contributions. Additional
funding was provided by the Florida Power and Light Company. Bruce Ackerman (Florida
Dept. of Natural Resources)

Manatee Telemetry Project. The Florida Department of Natural Resources' Florida
Marine Research Institute and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service tagged eight manatees at Tampa
Electric Company's Big Bend Power Plant in Apollo Beach on December 16 and 17, 1991.




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


Researchers captured and released 15 animals during the two days, but only eight (five females
and three males) were found suitable and fitted with satellite transmitter tags. These eight join
one male tagged earlier in 1991. Their movements will be monitored for at least three years.
Each transmitter is 21 inches long and is marked by unique colored bands for visual
identification. A four-foot tether (designed to break away if entangled) connects the
transmitter housing to a rubber harness that encircles the base of the tail. Sensors in each
transmitter record water temperature and animal activity. The information is transmitted via
satellite to a computer database, and also provides the location of the tagged animals.
A pilot study of four males tagged in Tampa Bay in February 1991 showed that the animals
migrated from Tampa Bay as far north as the Suwannee River and as far south as Charlotte
Harbor.
In addition to tagging the eight manatees, biologists also obtained measurements of all
15 captured, photographed distinctive scar patterns, and drew blood samples for genetic
analysis. The project was funded by the Save the Manatee Trust Fund. Florida Dept. of
Natural Resources

_Population Biology Workshop. A Workshop on Manatee Population Biology was held
in Gainesville on February 4-6. A panel of eleven national and international experts on
marine mammals, population dynamics and modeling, and wildlife statistics was convened
to comment on existing research programs and suggest innovations. Bruce Ackerman and Tom
O'Shea served as co-chairmen. (See also the article by Helene Marsh, above.)

Save the Manatee Club Sues for Independence. In an unusual outbreak of hostility between
environmental groups seeking to protect the Florida manatee, the Save the Manatee Club
(STMC) has filed suit in Circuit Court to gain corporate independence from its parent
organization, the Florida Audubon Society (FAS).
STMC currently has a $640,000 annual budget which is separate from that of FAS, and
some 30,000 members compared with FAS's 65,000. In addition, some 60% of FAS's income
(exclusive of STMC funds) reportedly comes to them for manatees.
In response to recent efforts by STMC to gain a more independent role for itself, the FAS
board of directors voted in late March against allowing STMC to incorporate itself. Judith
Delaney Vallee, STMC's executive director, has been fired and FAS has advertised for a
replacement. Meanwhile, the locks on STMC's office have been changed and Michael Nelson
has been appointed acting director.
According to court papers filed by STMC's attorney, FAS launched "a hostile takeover"
against his clients, improperly taking charge of STMC's budget, copyrights, trademarks, and
property. The lawsuit also discloses a 1989 memo in which a FAS vice president expressed
concern about losing donations to STMC if the organization incorporated. (Based in part on
reports in the Orlando Sentinel)




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


INDONESIA

More Sea Piggery. At the recent Marine Mammal Conference I had the pleasure of talking
with Hans de Iongh about dugong studies in Indonesia, and I took advantage of the opportunity
to ask about precise translations of local names for the dugong. He kindly followed up on this
and wrote to me as follows: "With respect to your specific question, I traced some
information which might interest you through my colleague anthropologist Gerard Persoon,
who did his Ph.D. on Siberut. According to him the local people on Siberut call the dugong
sakoko ka koat. which literally means 'pig in the sea'. In the Indonesian Dictionary
'Purwadanuda', the seacow is called babi duyung which means 'sea pig'."
There may be a conservation angle to this discussion. It has been suggested that it would be
judicious to promote "seapig" and "seacow" as alternatives, according to which local taboos
would provide maximum protection! Better yet, as a reporter from the Times of India once
suggested, we could promote the idea that dugong "products" were anti-aphrodisiacs! Paul K.
Anderson

IVORY COAST

World Bank Changes Policy on Commercial Logging. As reported in Sirenews No. 16,
the Ivory Coast was discovered to be continuing construction on a major road that threatened
coastal ecosystems used by manatees and other wildlife, contrary to an agreement with the
African Development Bank (which was funding the project) and a request from the World
Bank. The subsequent controversy over this loan, which environmentalists feared would open
huge tracts of pristine forest to unsustainable logging, has reportedly led the World Bank to
change its former policy and promise to stop funding commercial logging operations in
undisturbed tropical forests. No news is available, however, on the present status of the actual
road construction. (Source: Environmental Defense Fund, EDF Letter 22(5), November 1991)

THE NETHERLANDS

Manatee Births. In a letter to Warren Zeiller dated October 29, 1991, Dick Dekker of
the Amsterdam zoological park Natura Artis Magistra reports that their male West Indian
manatee Joop and female Mary are doing fine, and that the female is pregnant again. The calf
born in 1977 was sent to the Antwerp Zoo in 1981, where, unfortunately, he died three years
later. Mary's second calf, a female, was stillborn in 1987. Her third calf, a male, was born in
1989 and is now living with other manatees at Burgers Bush at Arnheim.

PHILIPPINES

The Feeding Ecology of Dugongs at Calauit Island, Busuanga, Philippines. As part of my




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


Master's degree studies, I developed a simultaneous monitoring system which used a team of
local observers to count dugongs around Calauit Island from nine shoreline vantage points.
Monitoring was implemented each month from March 1989 to May 1990. This allowed me to
identify the important dugong habitats around the island. On average, five dugongs were seen
per survey day. More dugongs were observed during the months of March and July 1989. These
periods coincided with the lull between monsoons that year. The site where dugongs were most
often sighted was about 1.5 m deep and supported a seagrass biomass averaging 1060 g/sq. m
(wet weight).
The dugongs were shy, making observations difficult. They were observed to graze once per
day, usually starting in the late afternoon or at night. Animals usually stayed in front of the
spur and groove sections of the reefs. Short seagrasses such as Halodule uninervis,
Cymodocea rotundata, C. serrulata, Syringodium isoetifolium, and Thalassia hemprichii
showed more evidence of being grazed than the taller species Enhalus acoroides. By direct
observations of the area grazed by a single dugong, I estimated that it consumed an average of
68.5 kg (wet weight) of seagrass per day.
I have outlined appropriate conservation measures for dugongs on this island, which is a
nature reserve. Lemnuel Aragones

PUERTO RICO

Protecting the Caribbean Manatee through Education. The Caribbean Stranding Network
and the University of Puerto Rico's Sea Grant College Program have coordinated the printing of
13,000 copies of a full-color manatee poster in Spanish. The poster is based on the theme of
"Miss them now, or miss them forever", and its purpose is to let the residents of different
Spanish-speaking Caribbean islands learn about how they can help protect this species from
extinction.
Save the Manatee Club, the Interamerican University's Biology Department in Puerto
Rico, and Joe Pauley sponsored the printing of the poster. It will be distributed free of charge in
public and private schools, fishing villages, marinas and natural resources government agencies
in Puerto Rico. With the purpose of encouraging other Caribbean organizations to initiate
similar education projects, a number of posters have been reserved for distribution in other
Caribbean countries.
In a related effort, the Caribbean Stranding Network and the Chelonia Society of Puerto Rico
received a small grant from Save the Manatee Club and Puerto Rico's Conservation
Foundation to print additional "Caution Manatee Area" signs in Spanish. The signs are
being placed in areas identified as inhabited by manatees and where manatees are in danger
of being hit by speeding boats. In addition, Yuisa y Salvador, a natural-size sculpture of a
manatee mother and calf, was produced by high-school students and professor Frank Rodriguez
at the Commonwealth School in San Juan. The sculpture has visited different schools and
activities in Puerto Rico, educating those who were not aware of these sirens' endangered status.




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


- Antonio Mignucci

THAILAND

_Dugong Research on the Coast of Thailand. Dugong dugon, a marine mammal that is very
close to being extirpated in Thailand, has long been an interest of Mr. Suwan Saiaueng, a
marine scientist working with the Research Section of Thailand's National Park Division.
He was the driving force behind establishing a small group of scientists as a dugong
research team that is presently studying a dugong population in southern Thailand. The team
chose to conduct their research in Had Chao Mai National Park and Koh Libong Non-Hunting
Area, where dugong sightings were often reported. These two protected areas are located in
Trang Province and both are composed of islands, beaches and extensive seagrass beds in the
surrounding waters of the Andaman Sea.
The team decided to carry out three aerial surveys of five days each, to estimate the
number of dugongs remaining. Permission from the Ministry of Agriculture and Extension
was granted to use their 4-passenger helicopter.
The first survey began on December 7, 1991. Transects were mapped out and a direct count
was made covering approximately 72 km. Of the five days flown on the first survey, only three
proved to be conducive for observing dugongs, the other two were overcast and rainy.
From the first survey, the team estimated that there were about 14 dugongs living in the
surrounding area. Of interest was one sighting that appeared to be of a mother with twin calves.
Another sighting, of an albino calf, was met with slight skepticism. However, the albino
calf sighting was reconfirmed on the second survey.
The second survey occurred in January 1992. Again the team flew for five days, with
similar results. This time they were fortunate enough to see the largest herd sighted so far, a
group of 20 animals. An albino calf was again sighted, as well as the mother with twin calves.
After the second survey the team recalculated the number of dugongs to be approximately 30.
The third survey is scheduled to take place at the end of March 1992, before the monsoon
season begins. The actual numberof days on which dugongs will be counted is only two. The
other three days will be set aside to allow local village headmen the opportunity to see the
dugongs from the air. The team realizes that the dugong's survival depends on the cooperation
of fishing villages in the area. Dugongs accidentally caught in fishermen's nets are killed for
their meat, oil, and bones, all of which help to enhance the fishermen's very meager income.
At present, programs have been initiated to educate and inform villagers on the importance of
conserving the endangered dugong. Educational efforts seem to be paying off, after the first
aerial survey, on two separate occasions villagers accidentally caught dugongs in their nets
and released them instead of killing them. An additional seven days will be spent in the
area mapping the seagrass beds, calculating biomass and density, and measuring water
temperatures in different areas.
The plight of the dugong in Thailand has been much publicized since the team's first




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


aerial surveys. Legislators, governors, academicians, musicians, actors and actresses, and
local villagers have all expressed a desire to help protect the species.
Unfortunately, aerial surveys are quite expensive and impossible to conduct on a regular
basis in Thailand. Therefore, the team is now investigating the possibility of establishing a
small observation platform on a small mountain in the area. It is still uncertain whether this idea
is feasible, since only one dugong has ever been sighted near the mountain. The team is also
looking into using radiotelemetry to assist in obtaining vital data on the dugongs. If these
animals are to be protected in Thailand, information is vitally needed on their population,
distribution, migration, ecology, and habitat requirements. The dugong research team
welcomes any advice or suggestions, especially in regard to radiotagging, and surveying
small populations. Correspondence should be addressed to either Suwan Saiaueng or Sean
O'Sullivan, Attn.: Dugong Project, National Park Division, Royal Forest Department, Jatujak,
Bangkok 10900, Thailand, FAX # 579 2791. Sean O'Sullivan


ABSTRACTS

The following abstracts are of papers and posters presented at the Ninth Biennial
Conference on the Biology of Marine Mammals, Chicago, Ill., Dec. 5-9, 1991.


RECENT LITERATURE


Adam, E. 1988. Lamantin: une sirene deguisee en vache. Terre Sauvage No. 21: 60-69.

Beck, C.A., and N.B. Barros. 1991. The impact of debris on the Florida manatee. Marine
Pollution Bull. 22(10): 508-510.

Bryant, J.D. 1991. New early Barstovian (middle Miocene) vertebrates from the upper
Torreya Formation, eastern Florida panhandle. Jour. Vert. Paleo. 11(4): 472-489.
["Hesperosiren" crataegensis.

Clark, J.M. 1991. A new early Miocene species of Paleoparadoxia (Mammalia:
Desmostylia) from California. Jour. Vert. Paleo. 11(4): 490-508. [P. weltoni, n. sp.]

Domning, D.P. 1991. Why save the manatee? Pp. 167-173 in Reynolds and Odell, 1991,
Manatees and duaongs [see below.


Domning, D.P., and V. de Buffre'nil. 1991. Hydrostasis in the


Sirenia* citiantitative data




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


and functional interpretations. Mar. Mamm. Sci. 7(4): 331-368.

Eldredge, L.G. 1991. Annotated checklist of the marine mammals of Micronesia. Micronesica
24(2): 217-230.

Frey, R. 1991. Zur Ursache des Hoden-Descensus (descensus testiculorum) bei
Sa"ugetieren: Die Galoppunfa"higkeit der Testiconda. Teil II. Zool. Jahrb., Abt. Anat.
Ontog. Tiere 121(4): 277-330. [Sirenian locomotion.]

Lefebvre, L.W., and H.I. Kochman. 1991. An evaluation of aerial survey replicate count
methodology to determine trends in manatee abundance. Wildl. Soc. Bull. 19: 298-309.

Lepthien, E.U. 1991. Manatees. Chicago, Childrens Press: 1-48. [Children's book on Florida
manatees.]

Lowenstein, J.M., and G. Scheuenstuhl. 1991. Immunological methods in molecular
paleontology. Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London, B. Biol. Sci. 333(1268): 375-380. [Proteins
from bones of Hydrodamalis gigas]

Ohnishi, K. 1991. A tentative evolutionary tree of mammalian orders constructed by
Hennigian comparison of the amino acid sequences of alpha-crystalin A chain,
myoglobin, and hemoglobin alpha chain. Sci. Rept. Niigata Univ., Ser. D (Biol.), No.
28: 19-31.

O'Shea, T.J. 1988. Manatee research efforts under way on Florida's east coast.
Endangered Species Tech. Bull. 13(2): 3-4.

Patton, G.W., and E. Gerstein. 1992. Toward understanding mammalian hearing
tractability: preliminary underwater acoustical perception thresholds in the West Indian
manatee Trichechus manatus. In: D.B. Webster, R.R. Fay, & A.N. Popper (eds.), The
evolutionary biology of hearing. New York & Berlin, Springer-Verlag: 783.

Rattner, R. 1990. Manatees among us. Animals, July/Aug. 1990: 26- 31.

Reynolds, J.E., III, and D.K. Odell. 1991. Manatees and dugongs. New York, Facts on File:
xiv + 192.

St. Aubin, D.J., and V. Lounsbury. 1990. Oil effects on manatees: evaluating the risks. In:
Sea mammals and oil: confronting the risks. Academic Press: 241-251.




NUMBER 17 APRIL 1992


Simmons, N. 1992. A wetsuit for a manatee. Wildlife Conservation 95(2): 9.

Weigle, B.L., J.E. Reynolds III, G.W. Patton, and J.R. Wilcox. Manatee (Trichechus
manatus) winter use of warm water discharges in Tampa Bay. In: K. Mahadevan, R.K.
Evans, P. Behrens, T. Biffar, and L. Olsen (eds.), Proc. Southeastern Workshop on
Aquatic Ecological Effects of Power Generation. Mote Marine Laboratory Rept. No. 124: 153-
164.

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