Artigo Revisado por pares

Distribution and status of manatees Trichechus spp. Near the mouth of the amazon river, Brazil

1981; Elsevier BV; Volume: 19; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/0006-3207(81)90044-6

ISSN

1873-2917

Autores

Daryl P. Domning,

Tópico(s)

Marine and fisheries research

Resumo

Interviews with hunters and collection of skulls indicate that Trichechus inunguis occurs throughout the region of the Amazon River estuaries from Amapá to the mainland of Pará, including Ilha de Marajó and islands on its Atlantic coast. T. manatus has a disjunct distribution in Brazil, apparently occurring both on the coast of Amapá north of Cabo Norte and in the Rio Mearim (Maranhão) as well as further to the southwest; it seems to have been exterminated from the Atlantic coast of Pará and is absent from the Marajó region. Continued subsistence hunting can best be controlled by destruction of illegal camboas (fence-like traps) which catch manatees at high tide. Areas deserving study are the coast and inland lakes of eastern Amapá, the only place in the world where two sirenian species might still be found in sympatry or immediate proximity, and the lower Rio Mearim in Maranhão, which may still contain a sizable population of T. manatus. Ecological studies in these areas should have particular relevance to hypotheses of sirenian evolutionary interactions, and manatee reserves should be established in both areas.

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