Dugongs | Animals I Birds
The
Biology of Dugongs
Dugongs
(Dugon~ dugon) are mammals and have a life span of 70 years
or more, similar to our own.
Females
do not have their first calf until they are at least ten and
sometimes up to 17 years old. They bear only one calf at a time
after a pregnancy lasting about a year, and suckle the calf for
18 months or more. The calves never venture far from their mothers
and often ride on their backs.
Females
produce calves only once every three to five years, so adult
survival must be very high. This means that at least 95% of adults
alive at the beginning of a year must still be alive twelve months
later for population numbers to be sustained.
The
age of a dugong is estimated by counting growth layers in its
tusks (like measuring tree rings) which erupt after puberty in
males and in a small proportion of older females. Groups of males
follow a female dugong in oestrous (or "on heat") and many mate
with her, inflicting scars on the female's back, and on each
other.
There
are only four living types of sea cow: three are manatee species
(Trichechidae) found in the Atlantic region and one dugong (Dugongidae)
found in Australian tropical and subtropical waters. The other
modern clugonid, the seven- metre long Stellar's Sea Cow was
exterminated by sealers in the North Pacific in the late 18th
century. Dugongs are classified ar, Sirenia, or Sea Cows, and
their nearest terrestrial relative is the elephant.
Adult
dugongs grow to three metres long and weigh up to 400 kg, Newborns
are about 1.2 metres long and weigh up to 30 kg. Dugongs are
believed to see about as well as a diver wearing a face mask
and seem to have acute hearing. Their eyes, and ears which have
no flaps or lobes, are on each side of the head. Their paired
nostrils are on the top of the head and have valve-like devices
that prevent water entering when they dive. Dugongs surface for
air for a few seconds, every few minutes.
Dugongs
appear to have a good memory of place, as satellite tracking
shows them returning hundreds of kilometres to specific spots.
Because like humans, they live for a long time, they must have
few natural predators but they are prey to sharks, crocodiles
and killer whales as young animals. If their mothers die, it
is almost impossible to rescue the young, as we can with some
other wildlife, because calves suckle for so long and their seagrass
diet cannot be grown in captivity. Orphaned calves have not so
far been successfully rehabilitated in Australia because of their
complex nutritional requirements.
They
have flippers and tails that resemble those of dolphins, but
they lack a dorsal fin. Unlike dolphins which can be recognised
from individual physical characteristics, individual dugongs
are difficult to distinguish although most are marked by scars
delivered by the tusks of other dugongs. They can move over very
large areas, which they travel alone or with their calves in
search of food.
Dugongs | Animals I Birds
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