A manatee is worth more alive: the mission to save Africa’s sea mammals
Once branded ‘rogue animals’, the elusive creatures
were on the brink of extinction, but hope is rising for their survival
A manatee calf tangled in fishing net. The mammals
face many threats, including death as bycatch and entrapment in dams.
A manatee
calf tangled in fishing net. The mammals face many threats, including death as
bycatch and entrapment in dams. Photograph: Courtesy of AMMCO
It is a blistering day in the Senegalese coastal
town of Joal and a group of biologists are standing in a motorised dugout
canoe, scanning the cyan waters for floating manatee dung.
Suddenly, a bobbing brown mass appears in the
distance.
“Look! Over there! Poo!” cries Lucy Keith-Diagne,
the lead researcher. But her excitement is quickly stifled when it turns out to
be a piece of wood.
For the past 14 years Keith-Diagne has been on a
mission to protect the African manatee. There are an estimated 10,000 left,
spread across 21 African countries, from the coast of Senegal down to Angola
and inland to Chad. The DNA extracted from faecal samples allows Keith-Diagne
to isolate individual populations and determine which groups are most
endangered.
African manatees are classified as a vulnerable
species on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List. They
face many threats, including entanglement in fishing nets and entrapment in
dams. In some countries they are heavily poached.
The animals are so elusive that many locals know
them only from myths. In countries such as Senegal, where the animals are
revered as auspicious water spirits, poaching is rare. But dams still pose a
major threat: the cumbersome mammals can get trapped in narrow passageways and
drown.
Keith-Diagne said local dam authorities have been
receptive to her proposed modifications of the structures. Politicians have
also come on board. In 2014, her husband, Tomas Diagne, also a biologist,
successfully petitioned the government to set aside 275 hectares (679 acres)
for an aquatic reserve. The area is now home to an estimated 100 manatees as
well as hundreds of Adanson’s mud turtles – a species unique to the local lake.
The couple are also helping the surrounding communities to develop an
ecotourism industry.
Keith-Diagne’s conservation work has extended into
other parts of Africa. With the help of a Pew Marine fellowship, she formed a
network of nine biologists in Senegal, Gambia, Nigeria, Cameroon and Democratic
Republic of Congo to document every manatee captured or killed over three
years. The project has already identified one clear trend: Nigeria is a leader
in manatee mortality.
Hunters can make up to $2,000 (£1,626) from a single
catch in the country, where manatee meat is said to be beneficial for diabetics
and their oil is thought to be cholesterol-free. In addition, their penises are
believed to cure impotence, their ear bones to ward off bullets, and eyes
believed to possess magical powers. The faeces left over in manatee intestines
are dried and used to mend broken bones.
According to Nigerian myth, upon encountering a
human, a manatee will tickle them until they laugh so hard they drown.
Rumours of manatees breaking fishing nets and
capsizing canoes led to their classification as a “rogue animal” in the 1970s –
an official classification for animals that threaten human livelihoods, such as
crocodiles and hippopotami.
The classification was intended as a way for
government officials to meet revenue targets, says Edem Eniang, a professor of
wildlife resource management at the University of Uyo in Nigeria.
Nigeria began issuing manatee hunting permits but
stopped in the early 1990s when hunters began returning empty-handed, demanding
refunds. The animals had been driven to the brink of extinction. Now Nigeria
has conservation laws that protect manatees and other endangered wildlife, but
critics say they are rarely enforced.
“Poachers
trade them openly on the street, and nobody does anything,” says Eniang. Last
month, Nigeria’s environment ministry announced it was launching an
investigation after a video emerged of a manatee being dragged along a road by
a group of young men.
The manatee market in Nigeria is so profitable that
poachers traffic the animals from neighbouring countries. A growing demand for
live manatees in Asia has made matters worse, Eniang adds.
“I’m sitting out here like a lone wolf, crying into
the wilderness,” he says. “If we don’t do something now, we’ll end up eating
the last manatee.”
Manatee biologist Lucy Keith-Diagne holds an African
manatee skull at her home in Senegal.
In addition to poaching, manatees in Nigeria are
suffering from habitat loss. During the dry season farmers graze their cattle
on the nutritious wetlands where manatees feed – the climate crisis has left
the herders little alternative. As the cattle graze, the farmers set what’s
left on fire, hoping it will spur growth.
Oil spills, sand dredging and urban development have
also contributed to the destruction of Nigeria’s manatee habitat.
Eniang and his team often go undercover, posing as
buyers to keep tabs on poachers and document manatee killings. They visit
schools to teach the importance of conservation and they run TV and radio
information campaigns. Such campaigns can and have made a difference. In
Cameroon, education and awareness initiatives have pushed manatee hunting to
its lowest level.
Aristide Takoukam, the director of the African
Marine Mammal Conservation Organisation in Cameroon, gives frequent
presentations at schools and organises field trips to Lake Ossa, a wildlife
reserve created in 1948.
“I want to teach them to see nature in a different
way than their parents,” he says. “I want to show them that in animals, they
can also find beauty.”
He also trains fishermen in how to make a living
from bee farming and soap making instead of manatee hunting and with the help
of an American ecotourism expert, is developing an industry around manatee
sightseeing, complete with lakeside bungalows, kayaking and bird watching.
“I want to show them that a manatee is worth more
alive than dead,” he says.
Though Takoukam has effectively shifted local
attitudes toward manatees, another threat has emerged in the waters of Lake
Ossa.
Since 2017, the lake has seen a proliferation of
salvinia molesta, an invasive plant that kills the antelope grass manatees feed
on. The animals have begun migrating into unprotected waters in search of food.
Takoukam suspects that a reservoir dam erected on
the Senegal River in 2016 is to blame. The structure flooded vast areas of
land, causing plants to decompose and release high levels of nitrogen and
phosphorus. When the gates lift, those nutrients are released downstream,
ultimately accumulating in the stagnant waters of Lake Ossa. The concentration
of phosphorus in the lake has doubled over the past three years.
Takoukam contacted a number of experts asking for
help and Louisiana State University answered. They sent him 350 salvinia-eating
insects called salvinia weevils, which are currently being reared in a facility
near Lake Ossa. As soon as the tick-sized bugs have multiplied they’ll be
released onto the lake.
“My manatees
were at risk so I needed to find a solution,” Takoukam says.
It is this kind of attitude that inspired
Keith-Diagne to organise the first-ever African manatee symposium. The event,
planned for April in Senegal, will bring together more than 50 manatee
conservationists from at least nine African countries, as well as experts from
Florida, Malaysia and Brazil.
It will be the first time activists such as Takoukam
and Eniang have a platform to present their work.
“People think nothing is being done to help the
African manatee, but actually there’s been a lot of progress,” Keith-Diagne
says. “It’s an opportunity to inspire others.”