The Manatee Rehabilitation Partnership (MRP) was established in late 2001 and
marked the beginning of a new era of cooperation in the manatee rehabilitation effort. Prior to the formation of the Consortium, state and federal agencies exclusively provided post-release monitoring for Florida manatees rehabilitated at permitted and contracted manatee rehabilitation facilities in Florida. Because it is difficult to maintain funding levels necessary to meet all of the escalating manatee conservation needs, these agencies
were no longer able to bare sole responsibility to provide this service. However tracking the fate and health of rehabilitated and released manatees is essential to determining the successful contribution of the rehabilitation program to the recovery of Florida manatee populations.
What are the goals of the manatee rescue and rehabilitation program?
The goal of the manatee rescue and rehabilitation program is to treat sick and injured manatees and release them back into the wild. The endangered Florida manatee is at risk from both natural and man-made causes of injury and mortality. Exposure to red tide, cold stress, and disease are all natural problems that can affect manatees. Man-made threats include boat strikes, crushing by flood gates or locks, and entanglement in or ingestion of fishing gear. Sick and injured manatees are reported to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (1-888-404-FWCC) which is responsible for coordinating manatee rescue in Florida. After an animal is rescued, it is taken to a rehabilitation facility. There are three federally permitted manatee rehabilitation facilities: Lowry Park Zoo, Miami Seaquarium, and SeaWorld Florida. Other facilities sometimes hold manatees after they are no longer receiving acute care treatment. These include the following: Cincinnati Zoo, Columbus Zoo, EPCOT's Living Seas, Homosassa Springs State Wildlife Park, and SeaWorld California.
Who are the MRP partners?
The MRP is a cooperative group of non-profit, private, state, and federal entities with a stake in tracking the post-release fate of rehabilitated manatees in the wild. The founding partners are: Columbus Zoo, Disney Conservation Fund, EPCOT-Living Seas, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission's Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute, Lowry Park Zoo, Miami Seaquarium, Save the Manatee Club, SeaWorld Florida, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey’s Sirenia Project, and
Wildlife Trust.
See a list of the MRP partners.
How does the partnership operate?
The partners provide funding and technical expertise to a third party group chosen by the MRP to provide post-release monitoring services. Wildlife Trust is currently performing this function. The financial, technical, and field support that has been contributed
by the partners provide an annual window for the monitoring program to release
several animals to be tracked each year. The MRP continuously seeks additional outside funds to continue the program. The funds that have been contributed
each year are being used for real costs associated with the program including personnel salary, tags, tracking equipment, and satellite time. In turn, Wildlife Trust
provides rapid feedback and data to the members of the MRP regarding the tracked animals.
Who will be tracking the animals?
The primary group responsible for tracking the animals released through this program is Wildlife Trust. They have hired Monica Ross, an experienced manatee biologist and tracker, to visually check on the animals as well as follow their progress via satellite tracking. Monica will be posting periodic field notes in the Manatee Update section of the web site on the animals she is tracking.
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