blue spring state park swimming
PHOTO BY JAYLEN WALTON MEMORIES WITH MANATEES — A group of divers at Blue Spring State Park take advantage of the opportunity to swim with Plantaina the manatee. They are monitored carefully by the nearby volunteer on kayak patrol so that both Plantaina and her visitors are happy and safe.

After seeing a surge of deaths in 2021 and 2022, the number of manatees that died in Florida last year dropped to 556, according to preliminary information posted on the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission website.

The total was down from 1,100 deaths in 2021 and 800 in 2022. Also, the commission said last year’s total was below a five-year average of 793 deaths and the lowest total since 2017.

The website said about 20 percent of deaths in 2023 stemmed from a red-tide bloom in Southwest Florida. Also, a top cause of deaths was watercraft collisions.

“Population models identify both watercraft collisions and red tide blooms as one of the most significant threats to manatees long-term,” the website said.

Locally, Volusia County’s own Blue Spring State Park in Orange City saw a record number of manatees — 932 — at the state park Jan. 21.

— Beacon reporter Noah Hertz contributed to this article

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here