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A blog is a function of translating the language of any country, the last part of the blog View translating feature and use the desired country/Блог функция переводить на язык той или иной страны, последнюю часть блога Посмотреть особенность перевода и использовать нужную страну

Friday, July 3, 2015

Manatee

The Florida manatee (Trichechus manatus latirostris) is found primarily in the Florida peninsula, but can occasionally be sighted as far north as Virginia and west to Mississippi. The Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) shows a patchy distribution, including northeastern South America, southern Texas, Mexico, and the Caribbean. Trichechus senegalensis, theWest African manatee, can be found on the west coast of Africa from Senegal to Angola. The Amazonian manatee, Trichechus inunguis, is found throughout the Amazon river drainage basin. The species are distinguished by their geographical distributions, and while they are physically very much alike, some differences exist. Manatees all exhibit a streamlined body, full around the middle with no visible neck, tapering to a paddleshaped tail used for propulsion. They have two small pectoral flippers on their upper bodies that are used for steering and bringing food to the mouth. The lips are long and flexible, and help in funneling plants into their mouths. Manatees are grayish-brown in color and have sparse, bristly hair scattered thinly over their torsos. They have molars at the back of their mouths, and unlike most other mammals, as the front molars wear down they are continually replaced by new teeth from the back of the mouths. Adult West Indian andWest African manatees average about ten feet in length and weigh approximately 800 to 1200 pounds. Amazonian manatees are smaller, shorter, and more slender, averaging about eight feet in length and less than eight hundred pounds.

Adapted for the Aquatic Life
Streamlined bodies and flippers are ideal for the aquatic life of a manatee. They are agile and typically cruise in search of food at speeds of two to six miles per hour, but can swim as fast as fifteen miles per hour. While they have been sighted diving to depths of about thirty-three feet, they primarily forage for food no deeper than ten feet. Manatees can stay underwater for up to twenty minutes, but typically surface every two to three minutes for air. Manatees spend most of their day foraging for aquatic plants and will consume between 4 and 9 percent of their body weight in wet vegetation daily. The animals are nonaggressive and nonterritorial and spend the rest of their time traveling, investigating objects, and socializing. Manatees are considered semisocial, and the typical social unit is a female and her calf; however, congregations of up to two hundred individuals can be found near warm water sources such as power plant outfalls and hot springs, especially during winter months. Male manatees are sexually mature at about nine to ten years of age, and females at about seven to eight years. Mating takes place in the water, and the female is accompanied by, and mates with, several males. Gestation takes about twelve months; the newborn calf measures about four feet and weighs sixty to seventy pounds. Calves remain close to their mothers for up to two years. The calf is dependent on its mother for nutrition, and for learning about feeding and resting areas, migratory routes, and warm water refuges. It is believed that manatees can live to sixty years in the wild; however, habitat destruction and injury by boats and fishing lines are seriously endangering manatees worldwide

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