Courtesy MD DNR Sadly, you read that title correctly. According to the MD DNR, the department received a call last week from a citizen who reported a deceased manatee in the Dundalk region of Baltimore County. Subsequently, the animal was examined by an interagency team of biologists and veterinarians at the Smithsonian Institution. This was only the third case of a deceased manatee in Maryland.
“With cooling weather, current Maryland water temperatures are well below a manatee’s minimum survival temperature,” said Natural Resources State Fish and Wildlife Veterinarian Cindy P. Driscoll. “We are still analyzing samples taken during the necropsy examination, which will be analyzed over the next few weeks. Until that time the cause of death remains undetermined.”
Manatees are aquatic mammals commonly found in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina but in recent years have been found in waters ranging from Massachusetts to Texas, including Maryland. The first live Maryland manatee was documented in 1994 along the Upper Eastern Shore of the Chesapeake Bay. “Chessie” was captured in Queenstown and taken to Florida for release a few days later. Since that time, manatees have been reported throughout the Chesapeake Bay each summer. DNR reminds state residents to report any sightings of uncommon marine mammals and wildlife, including dolphins, manatees, sea turtles, or whales. The public can report sightings and strandings anytime to 800-628-9944. For more on this story, click to news.maryland.gov/dnr.