Defenders Magazine
Defenders Magazine
Defenders in Action: Thanks to DEN Members, Florida Manatees Win
With help from members of its Defenders'
Environmental Network, Defenders of Wildlife has won strong, new protections for
Florida's endangered manatees.
After DEN sent more than 50,000 e-mails
demanding action, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service promised to slow boaters by
creating new manatee protection zones on four heavily traveled rivers —- the
Caloosahatchee in Lee County, the St. John's in Duval, Clay and St. Johns
counties, and the Halifax and Tomoka in Volusia County.
That was only
part of the agreement with Defenders of Wildlife, Save the Manatee Club and 16
other groups. The pact also calls for stepped-up enforcement. The agency agreed
to post signs in 13 manatee protection zones already designated but not
enforced. The agreement also requires the National Park Service to strengthen
safeguards for manatees in national parks in Florida.
The deal comes with a federal judge
threatening to hold Interior Secretary Gale Norton in contempt of court for
refusing to obey three separate court orders to establish new protections for
the gentle sea cows.
"We hope the Fish and Wildlife Service will live up
to its side of the agreement this time around because that would mean real,
substantial protection for manatees that are dying in record numbers," says Mike
Senatore, litigation director for Defenders. "Since they landed back in court
because they ignored the previous settlement, and only settled because of the
threat of a contempt citation hanging over Secretary Norton, we'll have to be
vigilant to make sure real action follows this new agreement."
While
Norton dragged her feet, a record number of manatees were killed in 2002 in
collisions with boats, according to records released by state wildlife
officials. Deaths by boat reached 95, a large increase over the previous
all-time high of 82 in 1999. Endangered manatees were killed and maimed by boat
propellers and crushed by boat hulls.
Despite the new agreement, the
fight to save manatees isn't over. Even as the pact was filed in court, Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush met with Norton in Washington to complain and to press for "fewer
burdens on Florida's boaters and marine industry," according to the South
Florida Sun-Sentinel.















