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By Kathy Hagood
Snooty is the oldest living manatee to be born
and raised in captivity. He also is the first manatee to have a
"recorded" and documented birthdate. This gentle giant is
permanently housed at Parker Manatee Aquarium at the South Florida
Museum in Bradenton, Florida.
Snooty, originally "Baby Snoots," was born in 1948
in the old Miami Aquarium and Tackle Company, and sent to the South
Florida Museum the next year. Since then, he has become wildly popular with area
residents and visitors. He's even honored with a special birthday
party each year.
Snooty's current habitat, a 60,000-gallon pool,
offers above-and below-water viewing for visitors.
Sadly, 58-year-old Snooty is part of a vanishing
breed. Last year, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission, a record number of manatees (416) died. Of
those deaths, 86 were caused by boat strikes. Within the past decade
more than 3,100 manatees have died from all causes, with over 760 of
those animals killed by boats.
"The population can't possibly continue to sustain
mortality of this kind," said Patrick Rose, executive director of
the Save the Manatee Club.
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Snooty getting a strawberry treat. Photo
by: Kathy Hagood |
Members of the public can help by following safe
boating practices, and following speed limits in manatee zones. They
also can encourage lawmakers to require better protection of the
species.
Florida downgraded the manatees from endangered to
threatened last year, even though they are listed as endangered on
federal and international lists. The Save the Manatee Club believes
this change will further reduce the manatee population in
Florida.
Researchers who are studying manatees, including
Snooty, have found the aquatic mammals to be more intelligent than
previously thought. Even so, it's difficult for a slow-moving
manatee to get out of the way of a speeding powerboat.
The average adult manatee is about 10 feet long
and weighs between 800-1,200 pounds. It takes huge amounts of
lettuce to feed Snooty and other manatees in captivity, who
typically eat between 10-12 percent of their body weight daily.
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