EMERGING AND FLOATING PLANTS IN THE MANATÍ DIET (FAMILY: TRICHECHIDAE: TRICHECHUS MANATUS) IN THE CARIBBEAN OF COSTA RICA

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15359/revmar.2.10

Keywords:

Nutritional analysis, Costa Rica, diet,, Trichechus manatus, Tortuguero National Park

Abstract

Trips were conducted on different sectors of the Tortuguero National Park in search of traces of food left by the manatees to determine their diet and quantify the use and availability of plants contained in their diet,. In recent browsing sites the proportion of plants was quantified by analyzing the percentages of the plants found in the feeding sites (use) and sampled areas around them (availability). It was determined that two grass species: gamalote (Paspalum repens) and (Urochloa mutica) are plants that the manatees primarily selected for consumption. The present study permitted to determine how the manatee consumes food resources in the area.  This has been the basis for other research requiring information on dietary factors.  There are also other proposals being implemented for baiting and capture techniques in sensitive sites for the conservation of manatees, based on the distribution of the plants that the animals consume  in the area.

Author Biography

Alexander Gómez-Lépiz, Universidad Nacional

Instituto Internacional en Conservación y Manejo de Vida Silvestre

References

Altrichter, M. (1997). Estrategia de alimentación y comportamiento del chancho cariblanco (Tayassu pecari) en un bosque húmedo tropical de Costa Rica. Tesis de Maestría no publicada. Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica.

AOAC (Asociation of Official Analytical Chemists). (1984). Official Methods of Analisis. Edición 14. Washington, D.C, Estados Unidos: Editorial Santa Ana.

Aranda, M. (2000). Huellas y otros rastros de los mamíferos grandes y medianos de México. Xalapa, México: Instituto de Ecología, A. C.

Barrantes, J., Liao, A. & Rosales, A. (1985). Atlas Climatológico de Costa Rica. Ministerio de Agricultura y Ganadería. Instituto Meteorológico Nacional. San José, Costa Rica: Editorial Costa Rica.

Burn, D. (1986). The Digestive Strategy and Eficiency of the West Indian Manatee, Trichechus manatus. Biochem. Phys., 85A(1), 139-142.

Burn, D. & Odell, D. (1987). Volatile Fatty Acid Concentrations in the Digestive Tract of the West Indian Manatee, Trichechus manatus. Biochem. Phys., 88B (1), 47-49.

Byers, R. & Steinhorst, R. (1984). Clarification of a Technique for Analisys of Utilization-Availability Data. J. Wildl. Manage., 48(3), 1050-1053.

Church, D. C. & Pond, W. G. (1988). Basic Animal Nutrition and Feeding. Third Edition. New York, EE. UU; Published by John Wiley and Sons.

Colares, I. & Colares, E. (2002). Food Plants Eaten by Amazonian Manatee (Trichechus inunguis, Mammalia: Sirenia). Braz. Arch. Biol. Tech., 45 (1), 67-72.

Guterres, M., Marmontel, M., Martins, D., Farias, R. & Bustos, R. (2008). Anatomia e Morfologia de Plantas Aquáticas da Amazônia Utilizadas como Potencial Alimento por Peix-Boi Amazônico. São Pablo, Brasil: Instituto de Desenvolvimento Sustentável.

IMN (Instituto Meteorológico Nacional). (1975-1995). Datos de precipitación Área de Tortuguero. San José, Costa Rica: Gestión de Información y Comercialización.

IRET (Instituto Regional de Estudios en Sustancias Tóxicas). (2007). Análisis de agua y peces en un evento de contaminación dentro de diferentes cursos de agua en el Parque Nacional Tortuguero. Heredia, Costa Rica: Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica.

Jiménez, I. (1998). Ecología y Conservación del manatí antillano (Trichechus manatus) en el noreste de Costa Rica. Base de datos de los humedales del noreste de Costa Rica asociada a un sistema de información geográfica. Tesis de Maestría no publicada en Manejo y Conservación de Vida Silvestre. Universidad Nacional, Heredia, Costa Rica.

Jiménez, I. (1999). Estado de Conservación, Ecología y Conocimiento Popular del Manatí (Trichechus manatus) en Costa Rica. Vid. Silv. Neotrop., 8 (1-2), 18-30.

Jiménez, I. (2003). Los manatíes del río San Juan y los Canales de Tortuguero: ecología y conservación. San José, Costa Rica: Amigos de la Tierra.

Johnson, D. (1980). The Comparison of Usage and Availability Measurements for Evaluating Resuourses Preferente. Ecol., 61 (1), 65-71.

Launchbaugh, K., Provenza, F. & Pfister, J. (2001). Herbivore Response to Anti-quality Factors in Forages. J. Range Manage., 54, 431-440.

Litvaitis, J., Titus, K. & Anderson, E. (1994). Measuring Vertebrate Use of Terrestrial Habitats and Food. En The Wildlife Society, Research and Management Techniques for Wildlife and Habitat (pp. 254-274.). U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service. EE. UU.: Wildlife Society.

López, M., Altrichter, M., Sáenz, J. & Eduarte, E. (2006). Valor Nutricional de los Alimentos de Tayassu pecari (Atiodactyla: Tayassuidae) en el Parque Nacional Corcovado, Costa Rica. Rev. Biol. Trop., 54 (2), 687-700.

Manly, B., McDonald, P., Thomas, D., MacDonald, T. & Wallace, E. (2002). Resource Selection by Animals: Statistical Design and Analysis for Field Studies. San Diego, CA., EE. UU.: Editorial Springer.

Manugistics, Statgraphics Centurium, XV. (2005). Launching the program, and creating a simple data file [Computer program manual]. Estados Unidos : StatPoint Technologies, Inc.

Mignucci-Giannoni, A. (1998). The Diet of tha Manatee (Trichechus manatus) in Puerto Rico. M. Mamm. Scien., 14 (2), 394-397.

O’Shea, T. (1994). Manatees. Washington, D.C., EE. UU: Scientific American.

Provancha, J. & Hall, C. (1991). Observations of Associtions Between Seagrass Beds and Manatee in East Central Florida. Florida Scientis., 54 (2), 87-98.

Reep, R. & Bonde, R. (2006). The Florida Manatee: biology and conservation. Florida, EE. UU.: University Press of Florida.

Reynolds, J. & Odell, D. (1991). Manatees and Dugongs. Miami, EE. UU.: Library of Congress Cataloging, Florida.

Reynolds, J. & Rommel, S. (1996). Structure and Function of the Gastrointestinal Tract of the Florida Manatee, Trichechus manatus latirostris. Anat. Rec., 245, 539-558.

Reynolds, J., Szelistowski, W. & León, M. (1995). Status and Conservation of Manatee Trichechus manatus manatus in Costa Rica. Biol. Conserv., 71, 193-196.

Rommel, S., Reynolds, J. & Lynch, H. (n.d.). Adaptations of Herbivorous Marines Mammals. North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine. Florida, Estados Unidos. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Smethurst, D. & Nietschmann, B. (1999). The Distribution of Manatees (Trichechus manatus) in the Coastal Waterways of Tortuguero, Costa Rica. Biol. Conserv., 89, 267-274.

Smith, K. (1993). Manatee Habitat and Human-related Threats to Seagrass in Florida: A review. Florida, EE. UU.: Departamento de Protección al Medio Ambiente.

Sokal, R. & Rohlf, J. (1979). Biometría: Principios y métodos estadísticos en la investigación biológica. Madrid, España: Ediciones H. Blume.

Stephens, D. & Krebs, J. (1986). Foraging Theory. Nueva York, Estados Unidos. Universidad de Princeton.

Thomas, D., Manly, B. & Mc.Donald, L. (2001). A Unified Theory for the Study of Resource Selection (Availability and Use) by Wildlife Populations. En Wildlife 2001: Populations (pp. 56-64). D. McCulloungh y R. Barrett, (Eds.), Inglaterra: British Library.

Van Soest, P. (1967). Development of a Comprehensive System of Feed Analysis and its Application to Forages. J. Anim. Sci., 26, 119-128.

Published

2010-12-16

How to Cite

Gómez-Lépiz, A. (2010). EMERGING AND FLOATING PLANTS IN THE MANATÍ DIET (FAMILY: TRICHECHIDAE: TRICHECHUS MANATUS) IN THE CARIBBEAN OF COSTA RICA. Journal of Marine and Coastal Sciences, 2, 119-134. https://doi.org/10.15359/revmar.2.10

Issue

Section

Scientific articles

How to Cite

Gómez-Lépiz, A. (2010). EMERGING AND FLOATING PLANTS IN THE MANATÍ DIET (FAMILY: TRICHECHIDAE: TRICHECHUS MANATUS) IN THE CARIBBEAN OF COSTA RICA. Journal of Marine and Coastal Sciences, 2, 119-134. https://doi.org/10.15359/revmar.2.10

Comentarios (ver términos de uso)