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Warm Waters = Manatee Sightings |
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Warm weather has arrived and with it has come this area's regular seasonal residents, the West Indian manatee. The Mobile Manatees Sighting Network (MMSN), based at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab (DISL), needs your help to conduct vital research on these endangered mammals. You can help by reporting any and all manatee sightings to the DISL research team. There are three methods by which to report your sighting information 24 hours a day, 7 days a week: phone (1-866-93-5803), email (manatee@disl.org), or online sighting form (http://manatee.disl.org). The MMSN encourages manatee spotters to report their sightings as soon as possible and to contact them with any questions or for additional information. DISL researchers remained busy throughout winter 2009, with manatee sightings in Mobile Bay and Steele Creek in Satsuma, but this spring has been quiet, with fewer than expected reports. As bay waters warm up, we expect to see more manatees in Mobile Bay and nearby waters. "Our primary goal this time of year is to remind people that manatees are here and that the sighting network is active. We really depend on the public to report every sighting, any time, as soon as possible," states DISL Senior Marine Scientist Dr. Ruth Carmichael. What you can do to assist our research and help protect manatees in Alabama & surrounding waters: |
![]() By reporting your manatee sightings, you'll help researchers understand their behavior, and by doing so, protect them more successfully. |
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The Mobile Manatees program focuses on defining where manatees live and what they eat while visiting Mobile Bay and surrounding waters. The program is also dedicated to sharing data with other researchers, managers, and the public. In 2007, DISL and Wildlife Trust (WT) in Florida started the MMSN, the first formal network to receive and track manatee sightings in AL waters. The program successfully processed more than 100 sightings in both 2007 and 2008 (in contrast, only 159 sightings were recorded for the area in the entire 20 years prior). Additionally, the program has serendipitously served as a contact for sightings from other states such as MS, FL, NC, and GA. |
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