Michael T. Walsh1, DVM; Gregory D. Bossart2, DVM; Terry
W. Campbell1, DVM, PhD
The endangered West Indian manatee, (Trichechus manatus) a
herbivorous marine mammal found in the waters of the Southeast United States, is subject to
many mortality factors. Those factors affecting the manatee are generally grouped into seven
categories. These include watercraft trauma, flood gate and canal lock trauma, other human
related injuries (entrapment, entanglement) perinatal death, cold stress' other natural
illnesses, and undetermined causes of death.
Of 87 individual manatees rescued at Sea World of Florida over a 14 year
period, 41 individuals presented with traumatic injuries. Line entanglement accounted for 17
individuals, propeller wounds 16 individuals, and 8 manatees presented for blunt trauma. During
4 years at Miami Seaquarium there were 16 rescues. Of these 11 were blunt trauma and 2 had
severe propeller wounds. The yearly percentage of animals killed by boat related trauma has
steadily increased from 10 in 1976 to 50 individuals in 1989. Traumatic injuries incurred from
watercraft (boats, ships, airboats, barges) have resulted in hard tissue trauma (skull and
skeletal fractures) and soft tissue trauma (propeller lacerations, massive contusions, etc.).
Two major complicating factors affecting the survival rate for trauma victims are the severity
of the wounds incurred and the delay between initial injury and the time of presentation.
Treatment techniques commonly used in human and small animal chest trauma
are limited by the need to maintain the animals in water whenever possible. Suturing of
propeller lacerations is usually non-productive as a result of laceration age and secondary
subcutaneous fatty degeneration resulting in dehiscence. Chest tubes have been utilized for
pneumothorax, but this technique has two major weaknesses. Since the manatee is a breath
holder, most lung perforations do not heal if the pressure is released from the bruised thorax.
The valve allows a continued flow from the damaged lung held under positive pressure to the
hemothorax then through the valve. The valve tubing is usually rejected by the body in 2-3
weeks, long before the lung has healed. For many instances of severe trauma the most beneficial
approach is prevention by increasing protective measures for the animals in the wild.