Introduction
The Antillean manatee Trichechus manatus manatus, a herbivorous aquatic mammal, is categorized as Endangered on the IUCN Red List (Self-Sullivan & Mignucci-Giannoni, Reference Self-Sullivan and Mignucci-Giannoni2008), largely as a result of past uncontrolled hunting throughout the Wider Caribbean Region. In addition to hunting and fisheries bycatch, manatees are also subject to collisions with water craft, chemical and noise pollution, habitat degradation and habitat loss, among other threats, because they inhabit freshwater and shallow coastal marine environments heavily used by people (Reynolds & Marshall, Reference Reynolds, Marshall, Hines, Reynolds, Aragones, Mignucci-Giannoni and Marmontel2012; Self-Sullivan & Mignucci-Giannoni, Reference Self-Sullivan, Mignucci-Giannoni, Hines, Reynolds, Aragones, Mignucci-Giannoni and Marmontel2012). In most countries of the Wider Caribbean Region, remnant populations of the species are small and declining (UNEP, 2010). Such is the case for the Dominican Republic and Haiti, which share the island of Hispaniola, between Cuba and Puerto Rico (Fig. 1).
Historical data can be used as a baseline reference to assess the current status of species (Pauly, Reference Pauly1995; Swetnam et al., Reference Swetnam, Allen and Betancourt1999). No formal records of catch data exist to reconstruct past manatee population sizes and trajectories in Hispaniola. However, manatees were hunted by the original inhabitants of the island and archaeological studies provide insights into manatee distribution and aboriginal uses (e.g. Fewkes, Reference Fewkes1907; Miller, Reference Miller1916; Krieger, Reference Krieger1929; Miller, Reference Miller1929). Manatee bones have been found at archaeological sites in the Dominican Republic dating as early as 1250 bce (Veloz Maggiolo, Reference Veloz Maggiolo1976). At the time when the Spanish arrived in the West Indies in the late 15th century, the most dominant of the Indigenous peoples of Hispaniola, the Taíno, manufactured luxury and ceremonial objects carved from manatee bones and other materials (Cassá, Reference Cassá1974). The Spanish word for manatee comes from the Taíno word for breast, manatí, a term they presumably adopted from the Cariban languages (Arrom, Reference Arrom1972). During the conquest and colonization of the West Indies the eastern part of Hispaniola was primarily a Spanish colony and the western part a French colony. Manatees were considered an extraordinary and tasty fish, and descriptions of manatees were not uncommon in accounts of European voyagers in the 15–19th centuries (Durand, Reference Durand1983). Nevertheless, only a limited number of these historical documents were included in regional reviews (Lefebvre et al., Reference Lefebvre, O'Shea, Rathbun, Best and Woods1989, Reference Lefebvre, Marmontel, Reid, Rathbun, Domning, Woods and Sergile2001) and management plans for the West Indian manatee (UNEP, 1995, 2010), and pertinent literature about Hispaniola written in Spanish and French was excluded. Recent information about manatees in Hispaniola remains dispersed and mostly unpublished, hindering the assessment of the species’ status and the development of recovery plans to improve its conservation.
To document what is known about Antillean manatees in Hispaniola, identify knowledge gaps, and recommend relevant conservation actions to protect the manatee population in the Dominican Republic and Haiti, I reviewed historical and contemporary information on the species in English, Spanish and French. Documentary archives from three time periods were reviewed: the pre-Columbian era (1250 bce–1491 ce), 1492–1899 ce, and 1900–2013 ce (Supplementary Material 1). A comprehensive database of manatee sighting records in Hispaniola was compiled and analysed (Supplementary Material 2). My aims are to contribute to: (1) an update of the 2008 assessment of the West Indian manatee for the IUCN Red List (Deutsch et al., Reference Deutsch, Self-Sullivan and Mignucci-Giannoni2008), (2) updates of the Regional Management Plan for the West Indian Manatee (UNEP, 2010), and (3) future national manatee recovery plans of the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
Distribution
I obtained 889 manatee sighting records around Hispaniola from the documentary archives reviewed, the majority (98%) for the Dominican Republic. Twenty-four pre-Columbian records (1250 bce–1491 ce), comprising manatee teeth and unworked bones, bone utensils, amulets or idols and ceremonial objects, were found at archaeological sites distributed throughout the Dominican Republic (Fig. 1, Supplementary Fig. 1). Four pre-Columbian records of manatee bone fragments and utensils were found near Fort-Liberté in the north-east of Haiti (Rainey, Reference Rainey1941; Rouse, Reference Rouse1941; Fig. 1).
There were five manatee sighting records in each country for 1492–1899 ce (Fig. 1, Supplementary Fig. 1). For the Dominican Republic, the first sighting was recorded in the log of Columbus during his first voyage to America, when he sighted three ‘sirens’ in January 1493 near Río Yaque del Norte, on the north-west coast (de Herrera y Tordesillas, Reference de Herrera y Tordesillas1726; de Charlevoix, Reference de Charlevoix1731; Fernández de Navarrete, Reference Fernández de Navarrete1858; Hazard, Reference Hazard1873; de las Casas, Reference de las Casas1875; Baughman, Reference Baughman1946; Husar, Reference Husar1977). In his 1535 general history of the West Indies, Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés mentioned that manatees grazed on the banks of Río Ozama (the river that bisects Santo Domingo city), where many large manatees were harpooned from boats and canoes (Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés, Reference Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés1992). The missionary de Acosta ate manatee meat in Santo Domingo in c. 1571 (de Acosta, Reference de Acosta1590; Baughman, Reference Baughman1946; Husar, Reference Husar1977; Lefebvre et al., Reference Lefebvre, Marmontel, Reid, Rathbun, Domning, Woods and Sergile2001). Two unworked manatee ribs were recently recovered from the 1720–1723 Tile Wreck on the north-west coast (ADMAT, 2015; Supplementary Material 1). On the south-west coast, Walton (Reference Walton1810) sighted a manatee near Isla Beata.
According to de Charlevoix (Reference de Charlevoix1731), manatees were more common in Etang des Gonaïves (Gonaïves lake), on the central coast of Haiti, than in any other place in Hispaniola (Fig. 1). Moreau de Saint-Méry (Reference Moreau de Saint-Méry1798), mentioned that manatees were frequently caught in Port-de-Paix and Port-à-Piment, on the north and south coasts of Haiti, respectively. This author also mentioned several natural features or places named after manatees that suggest they were common in an area near Port-au-Prince: Rivière Lamantin, Pointe Lamantin, Baie Lamantin and Canton du Lamantin (a manatee river, point, bay and township, respectively; Fig. 1). Today, a manatee lighthouse (Phare Lamentin) and two manatee streets (Lamentin 52, and Lamatin 54) remain in that area. Descourtilz (Reference Descourtilz1809) mentioned that manatees were sometimes found in Rivière de l'Artibonite, but more particularly in Rivière de l'Estère, and that manatees were commonly hunted in the rivers.
There were 838 recent (1900–2013 ce), widespread sighting records in the Dominican Republic, mostly concentrated in six areas: from Monte Cristi to La Isabela; on the north coast of the Samaná peninsula; from Bahía de San Lorenzo to Bahía de la Jina; from Bayahibe to Las Calderas; from Nizao to Puerto Viejo; and from Barahona to Pedernales (Fig. 1). In Haiti 13 records were found in only two areas: Gonaïves to Montrouis on the central coast, and Jacmel to Grand Gosier on the south-east coast. The most recent sightings in Haiti were from 2007–2013. Regarding current use of freshwater habitats, fishers in the Dominican Republic have reported manatees in Río Higuamo since the 1960s, and as recently as 2009 (Fig. 1). One manatee was found in Río Haina in 2012. In contrast, there have been no recent sightings in rivers in Haiti.
Thirteen recent studies collected data on manatees in Hispaniola (Table 1). The only study in Haiti (Rathbun et al., Reference Rathbun, Woods and Ottenwalder1985) comprised a 12.5 hour countrywide aerial survey in 1982 and interviews conducted in 1982–1983, with few manatee sightings. To compare the spatial coverage of the dedicated manatee studies conducted in the Dominican Republic, I used as a reference coastal segments of c. 30 km defined by Belitsky & Belitsky (Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1978; Supplementary Fig. 2), determining the number of segments covered by each study (Table 1). In general, studies conducted from 2006 onwards covered fewer coastal segments than earlier studies, but several included multiple visits to the same areas, and geographical coordinates of manatee sightings were recorded more accurately (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007; Auil Gómez et al., Reference Auil Gómez, Ross, Clary, Malaret and Taylor2011; Reynoso et al., Reference Reynoso, Sanchez, Leon, Garcia, Casilla, Kuker and Reynolds2011).
1 Approximate survey effort in hours.
2 Number of manatee sightings from interviews or fieldwork that were included in the database.
3 Number of coastal segments of the Dominican Republic covered by the study, from a maximum of 51 (Supplementary Fig. 2).
4 Number of days spent conducting land, boat or aerial surveys.
5 Results of the studies were pooled because they were part of the same project managed by the NGO Prospectiva Ambiental Dominicana.
The study by Belitsky & Belitsky (Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1978, Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1980) is the most complete to date for the Dominican Republic, with countrywide aerial surveys and interviews conducted during 1976–1977 (Table 1). Ottenwalder & León (Reference Ottenwalder and León1999) included > 400 countrywide interviews completed in 1994–1996, but the results remain unpublished. Aerial surveys planned in that study were not completed because of a tragic accident in 1995, and only general information was published (Ottenwalder, Reference Ottenwalder1995).
Year-round presence of manatees has been confirmed in Caño Estero Hondo (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2006, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007, Reference Domínguez Tejo2009) (Fig. 1), a mangrove lagoon on the north-west coast of the Dominican Republic where manatee watching is now the main attraction. A manatee habitat modelling study was also conducted for the lagoon, using generalized linear models and simulations to relate manatee presence to habitat variables (Domínguez Tejo & Rivas, Reference Domínguez Tejo and Rivas2011). The two most recent dedicated manatee studies included aerial surveys on the north-east (Auil Gómez et al., Reference Auil Gómez, Ross, Clary, Malaret and Taylor2011) and south-west (Reynoso et al., Reference Reynoso, Sanchez, Leon, Garcia, Casilla, Kuker and Reynolds2011) coasts, but produced relatively few sightings (Table 1).
Several generalizations can be made from the manatee sighting records around Hispaniola. In the Dominican Republic, both historical (prior to 1900) and recent manatee sightings are widespread (Fig. 1, Supplementary Fig. 1). Although their habitat is primarily marine in the Dominican Republic, as noted earlier by Belitsky & Belitsky (Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1978, Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1980) and supported by the majority of sighting records (Fig. 1), manatees also inhabit mangrove lagoons with brackish water (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007) and occasionally rivers. Current knowledge of manatees in Haiti is limited but historical records show that they were once widely distributed along the coast and occupied freshwater habitats. The few dedicated manatee studies conducted in Hispaniola have been discontinuous in time and have lacked uniformity in spatial coverage, survey methods and survey effort (Table 1). The most recent studies have focused on smaller areas but collected higher quality data than earlier studies. Compared with other methods, traditional, manned aerial surveys have yielded few manatee sightings and may not be cost effective in Hispaniola.
Abundance, mortality and population trends
Manatees were historically abundant in Hispaniola (Table 2). Some authors from 1492–1899 ce, including Cuneo (Vega, Reference Vega1983), de Charlevoix (Reference de Charlevoix1731) and Lyonnet (Reference Lyonnet1800–1810), commented on the abundance of fish in Hispaniola, which at the time included manatees. Others explicitly referred to manatees. One of the major chroniclers of the West Indies, de Anglería, noted that manatees were found in great numbers in the waters of Hispaniola (MacNutt, Reference MacNutt1912). Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés (Reference Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés1992) testified to the abundance of manatees in Río Ozama and stated that they were frequently killed in the larger rivers of Hispaniola. In Haiti, Moreau de Saint-Méry (Reference Moreau de Saint-Méry1798) mentioned how frequently manatees were caught in Port-à-Piment and Port-de-Paix. Descourtilz (Reference Descourtilz1809) specified that the best time of day to hunt manatees was 12.00–14.00, when they grazed on the banks of Rivière de l'Estère and Rivière de l'Artibonite. Probably as a result of overharvest, manatees had become rare by the end of the 19th century. Hazard (Reference Hazard1873) mentioned that manatees were formerly more plentiful and were found only rarely.
1 References from this period are ordered chronologically by birth year of the original author, not by publication year.
2 Original author noted in square brackets.
3 Estimates for the Caño Estero Hondo-La Isabela area only.
4 Individual estimates for three areas: Las Calderas, in La Altagracia province; near Barahona town, in Barahona province; Bahía de Rincón, in Samaná province.
5 Estimates for El Estillero only, on the north coast of Samaná province.
There is no reliable estimate of the manatee population size in Hispaniola. Aerial surveys were not designed to generate abundance estimates, and estimates derived from interviews were educated guesses at best. In the Dominican Republic, the highest countrywide estimates were those of Belitsky & Belitsky (Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1978), who estimated 60 animals (95% CI 41–402), and Ottenwalder, who estimated < 200 animals (Lefebvre et al., Reference Lefebvre, Marmontel, Reid, Rathbun, Domning, Woods and Sergile2001).
Early estimates of manatee mortality in Hispaniola are qualitative (Table 2). Many manatees were killed in the 16–19th centuries but there is no evidence of their commercial exploitation in Hispaniola. During 1500–1800 the island's major exports switched from gold to sugar, leather, livestock, ginger, cocoa, tobacco and wood (Cassá, Reference Cassá1978). During that period, manatee meat may have been imported from South America to Hispaniola, as it was to other Caribbean islands (Lefebvre et al., Reference Lefebvre, Marmontel, Reid, Rathbun, Domning, Woods and Sergile2001).
Recent annual mortality estimates for the Dominican Republic were 3–23 individuals (Table 2). Ottenwalder (Reference Ottenwalder1995) stated that 5–15 manatees were captured annually (most intentionally), in addition to an unknown level of natural mortality. From countrywide interviews, Ottenwalder & León (Reference Ottenwalder and León1999) estimated a mean annual mortality of 23 animals. It is clear that the manatee population declined in Hispaniola during the last century (Table 2), although in recent years interviewees perceived local increases in Caño Estero Hondo and El Estillero (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007, Reference Domínguez Tejo2009; Fig. 1).
In Hispaniola manatees have been hunted most commonly with nets and harpoons; current capture methods include the use of beach seines, gill nets, spear guns and traps (Supplementary Table 5). Manatees were hunted primarily for their meat, but the use of manatee body parts diversified with time to include their oil, skin and bones (Supplementary Table 6). Traditional uses of manatee oil and bones for folk medicine and handcrafts persist today in the Dominican Republic (Ottenwalder, Reference Ottenwalder1995; Ottenwalder & León, Reference Ottenwalder and León1999; Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007). Details on manatee hunting methods and uses in Hispaniola are described in Supplementary Material 4.
Current threats
Current threats to manatees in Hispaniola are mostly anthropogenic and include hunting, fisheries bycatch caused by entanglement in fishing gear, boat strikes and disturbance by boat traffic, contamination, habitat degradation and destruction, and others (Supplementary Material 5, Supplementary Table 7). According to Ottenwalder (Reference Ottenwalder1995), the main cause of manatee mortality in the Dominican Republic is illegal hunting, and the main driver of this activity is demand for meat, which is sold quickly; in many cases the skeleton is buried and bones are retrieved later for commercial and medicinal purposes. The use of nets across river mouths and in some marine protected areas, where such use is prohibited, poses a threat to manatees (Ottenwalder, Reference Ottenwalder1995; Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2006), as do unattended nets (Reynoso et al., Reference Reynoso, Sanchez, Leon, Garcia, Casilla, Kuker and Reynolds2011). Net types involved in manatee hunting and fisheries bycatch include gill nets, beach seines and trawl nets (Pugibet & Vega, Reference Pugibet and Vega2000). In Haiti, Rathbun et al. (Reference Rathbun, Woods and Ottenwalder1985) reported that manatees were hunted traditionally with a spear, for eating and selling, and were caught accidentally in beach seines.
Anecdotes of manatee boat strikes were reported during interviews in the Dominican Republic (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007; Betancourt, Reference Betancourt2010), but no evidence of these events (e.g. images or necropsy reports of manatees injured or killed by boats) was found in the documentary archives reviewed. However, the abundance of fishing boats (Crombie, Reference Crombie1975) and disturbance by boat traffic (Belitsky & Belitsky, Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1978; Ottenwalder & León, Reference Ottenwalder and León1999) have been reported as threats to manatees in the Dominican Republic since the mid 1970s. High speed tourism boat traffic poses a threat to manatees in Bahía de San Lorenzo and its surroundings (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2006) and in coastal areas adjacent to Caño Estero Hondo (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007; Fig. 1). Boat strikes are therefore probably an emerging or potential threat to manatees in the Dominican Republic. In contrast, manatee boat strikes may be negligible in Haiti because most watercraft are non-motorized (Mateo & Haughton, Reference Mateo and Haughton2003).
Coastal development, especially for tourism, has resulted in habitat degradation or destruction in many parts of the Dominican Republic (Belitsky & Belitsky, Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1978; Pugibet & Vega, Reference Pugibet and Vega2000; Lefebvre et al., Reference Lefebvre, Marmontel, Reid, Rathbun, Domning, Woods and Sergile2001). Polluted coastal waters (Ottenwalder & León, Reference Ottenwalder and León1999; Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2006, Reference Domínguez Tejo2007; Auil et al., Reference Auil Gómez, Ross, Clary, Malaret and Taylor2011; Reynoso et al., Reference Reynoso, Sanchez, Leon, Garcia, Casilla, Kuker and Reynolds2011), marine debris and ghost nets (Pugibet & Vega, Reference Pugibet and Vega2000) are also reported as threats.
Lax manatee-related law enforcement in the Dominican Republic has multiple causes. Local authorities may lack the directive and the necessary training, equipment and logistical support to patrol areas effectively and regularly, so manatee captures may be hidden (Ottenwalder, Reference Ottenwalder1995; Ottenwalder & León, Reference Ottenwalder and León1999; Pugibet & Vega, Reference Pugibet and Vega2000; Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2006).
Commerce in manatee products has not been formally studied in Hispaniola but, during a visit to the city market of Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic in 1990, several stores offered polished and carved manatee ribs as ornaments and manatee oil to treat colds (Mignucci-Giannoni, Reference Mignucci-Giannoni1991). It is unclear whether this illegal commerce is increasing or decreasing.
The only reported natural threats to manatees in Hispaniola are shark predation (Belitsky & Belitsky, Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1978, Reference Belitsky and Belitsky1980; D'Ocampo, Reference D'Ocampo2004) and hurricanes (Ottenwalder & León, Reference Ottenwalder and León1999). No manatee health assessments have been conducted. Diseases and parasites have not been formally studied, except for a single case in the Dominican Republic in 1995 (Mignucci-Giannoni et al., Reference Mignucci-Giannoni, Williams, Toyos-González, Pérez-Padilla, Rodríguez-López, Vega-Guerra and Ventura-González1999). Current knowledge of the genetic structure of the population is based on two studies that revealed the manatee population of the Dominican Republic is part of the Florida, Bahamas and Greater Antilles biogeographical group of the West Indian manatee Trichechus manatus (García-Rodríguez et al., Reference García-Rodríguez, Bowen, Domning, Mignucci-Giannoni, Marmontel and Montoya-Ospina1998; Vianna et al., Reference Vianna, Bonde, Caballero, Giraldo, Lima and Clark2006). However, in both studies the sample size was limited to six individuals from the Dominican Republic. More research is needed on diseases, contaminant loads and the genetic structure of the manatee population of Hispaniola.
Legal status and conservation actions
Details on the legislation protecting manatees and their habitat in Hispaniola are presented in Supplementary Material 5. As contracting parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity, both the Dominican Republic and Haiti are responsible for promoting the recovery of threatened species and developing or maintaining legislation for their protection. In the Dominican Republic manatees have been protected since 1938 under Fishery Law 1518 (Ley de Pesca No. 1518, 1938), and several international and national legal instruments are in place to protect the species and its habitat (Supplementary Tables 8–10). In particular, with the ratifications of CITES in 1982 and the Protocol Concerning Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife in 1998, and with the enactment of the General Law of the Environment and Natural Resources in 2000 (Ley No. 64–00, 2000), the Dominican Republic prohibited the taking, possession or killing and the commercial trade of manatees, their parts or products. In 2011, manatees were officially categorized as Critically Endangered in the country (Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales, 2011). In contrast, Haiti has neither ratified CITES nor the Protocol (Supplementary Table 8). Moreover, without national legislation specifically designating manatees as a threatened species, they are not protected in Haiti. Although not specific to manatees, a 1978 fisheries decree (Décret Réglementant l'Exercice du Droit de Pêche en Haiti, 1978) prohibits the use of harpoons for fishing and could offer protection to manatees if strictly implemented.
In terms of manatee habitat protection, the Dominican Republic possesses an extensive system of marine protected areas, including two marine mammal sanctuaries for which a conservation plan (Domínguez et al., Reference Domínguez Tejo, Rivas, Mateo and Voss2010) and official management plans were recently developed (Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales, 2014, 2015). These plans include, for the first time, specific objectives and conservation actions for manatees.
Following the ecosystem services assessment and the sites proposed by the local NGO Fondation pour la Protection de la Biodiversité Marine (Wiener, Reference Wiener2013), the Haitian government recently created two marine protected areas that enclose extensive coastal areas recognized as optimal manatee habitat (Rathbun et al., Reference Rathbun, Woods and Ottenwalder1985): one on the south-west coast (Arrêté Déclarant l'Aire Protégée de Ressources Naturelles Gérées de Port-Salut/Aquin, 2013), and one on the north-east coast (Arrêté Déclarant l'Aire Protégée de Ressources Naturelles Gérées des Trois Baies, 2014; Supplementary Table 10).
Other manatee conservation efforts in the Dominican Republic have focused on community outreach and education, and the rescue and rehabilitation of stranded animals. In 1994–1995 a local NGO conducted a manatee research project (Ottenwalder, Reference Ottenwalder1995; Ottenwalder & León, Reference Ottenwalder and León1999) and a national manatee educational campaign. The campaign included over 30 talks, conferences and workshops, and 5,000 posters distributed nationwide (Prospectiva Ambiental Dominicana, 1995). The project received extensive media coverage, increasing public awareness of the conservation status of manatees, and promoting the need to increase their protection among authorities and local communities. During 2005–2010 the Centro de Investigaciones de Biología Marina of the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo and the Fundación Dominicana de Estudios Marinos led several manatee workshops and educational activities throughout the country.
The Red Dominicana de Varamientos (Dominican Stranding Network) was established in 1995, based at the Acuario Nacional (National Aquarium), to study, rescue and rehabilitate stranded marine mammals; in 2008, these duties were transferred to the Centro de Rescate y de Rehabilitación de Especies Acuáticas (Aquatic Species Rescue and Rehabilitation Centre). Manatees are the most commonly stranded marine mammal species in the country: most of the cases have been dead strandings with an undetermined cause of death (Veras Mena, Reference Veras Mena2014). Three successful manatee rehabilitations were identified in the documentary archives: a highly publicized case of an orphaned male calf rescued in 1995 (Ottenwalder, Reference Ottenwalder1995) that survived in captivity until 2007, and two calves rescued in 2012 that are currently housed at the Acuario Nacional. These captive manatees have not only played an important role in outreach and educational activities at the Acuario Nacional, but also in raising public awareness about manatees nationally. However, no manatee reintroductions have been attempted in the Dominican Republic and a national manatee recovery plan has not yet been developed.
In Haiti marine mammal conservation efforts are relatively recent and do not focus exclusively on manatees. The Haiti Ocean Project, a collaboration between Haiti, the Dominican Republic and the USA, has focused on marine mammal research, education and ecotourism (Vail et al., Reference Vail, Vasquez, Aquino, Bordey, Bordey, Simon and Michaud2011), gathering data on marine mammal sightings in Haiti through field surveys and fishing tours. Both Fondation pour la Protection de la Biodiversité Marine and the Haiti Ocean Project offer outreach and educational programmes about the marine environment and marine mammals in general. No marine mammal stranding network has yet been established.
Conservation recommendations
Based on this review I make the following recommendations for manatee conservation, prioritized by country, starting with those aiming to reduce anthropogenic mortality and habitat degradation (Supplementary Table 7), followed by those focused on education, research, management and legislation needs. Finally, I propose research and conservation measures that require coordinated actions between both countries as well as international expertise. The organizations and/or groups of actors best suited to implement each recommendation are indicated in parentheses.
Recommendations for the Dominican Republic:
(1) Increase coastal patrolling and train law enforcement agents to prosecute offenders, to halt illegal hunting of manatees (Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales (MIMARENA), Marina de Guerra).
(2) Regulate boat traffic and the use of beach seines, gill nets and trawl nets in the six identified coastal areas where most recent manatee sightings have been reported (Fig. 1; MIMARENA, Marina de Guerra, Consejo Dominicano de Pesca y Acuicultura).
(3) Enforce existing laws regarding the issuance of environmental permits for coastal development projects that may negatively impact manatee habitat (MIMARENA).
(4) Enforce existing laws regarding the illegal trade of manatee products (Supplementary Material 4–5; MIMARENA).
(5) Continue organizing education and awareness campaigns for coastal communities, to reinforce the need to protect manatees and to discourage illegal hunting and the use of manatee body parts for folk medicine and handcrafts (Supplementary Material 4–5; MIMARENA, local universities and NGOs).
(6) Systematically assess disease and parasite loads of rescued manatees and recovered manatee carcasses, and initiate sample collections for future genetic and contaminant studies (Centro de Rescate y de Rehabilitación de Especies Acuáticas (CERREA)).
(7) Reintroduce rehabilitated manatees back to the wild (CERREA).
Recommendations for Haiti:
(8) Enforce the prohibition of harpoon fishing under the 1978 fisheries decree (Supplementary Material 5) and update the regulations on the use of beach seines, to reduce manatee captures (Service des Pêcheries).
(9) Implement a national manatee education and awareness campaign for fishers, with the goal of reducing manatee captures (Ministère de l'Environnement (MdE), local NGOs).
(10) Conduct more dedicated manatee studies and confirm current and former habitat. These studies could combine interviews and reconnaissance boat trips with local guides to the areas where manatees have been reported recently and historically (Fig. 1), to confirm manatee presence and identify high-use areas and site-specific threats to the species (local and international universities, research institutes, NGOs).
(11) Establish a marine mammal stranding network. Similar to the Dominican Republic, manatees may be the most commonly stranded marine mammal in Haiti, and stranding events could contribute information on the species’ distribution, health and mortality, and on any threats (MdE, local NGOs).
(12) Develop national legislation that specifically protects manatees (Supplementary Material 5; MdE, Parlement Haïtien).
(13) Declare more marine protected areas that include manatee habitat as confirmed by new dedicated manatee studies (MdE, Parlement Haïtien).
(14) Ratify CITES, the Protocol Concerning Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife, and the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals. The latter could provide a platform to promote future binational manatee conservation actions with the Dominican Republic (Supplementary Material 5; Parlement Haïtien).
Binational recommendations:
(15) Develop national manatee recovery plans that facilitate coordinated conservation actions between the Dominican Republic and Haiti (MIMARENA, MdE).
(16) Conduct telemetry studies in concert with health assessments and genetic sampling of wild animals to identify habitats highly used by manatees, establish a baseline of manatee health, and identify potential concerns for the manatee population regarding diseases, contaminant loads and genetic structure (local and international universities, research institutes, NGOs).
(17) Obtain a reliable estimate of the total size of the manatee population in Hispaniola, or a reliable estimate of the population trend, to use as a baseline to measure the success of future conservation actions (local and international universities, research institutes, NGOs).
Despite the historical decline of manatees in Hispaniola their future is not necessarily bleak. Conservation actions in the Dominican Republic since the late 1930s have increased the protection of the species and its habitat. Since 2000, Haiti has taken steps for the conservation of marine mammals and marine protected areas in general. This review and additional content in Domínguez Tejo (Reference Domínguez Tejo2016) served as the basis for reports on the status of the Antillean manatee in the Dominican Republic and Haiti prepared for IUCN (Domínguez Tejo, Reference Domínguez Tejo2018a,Reference Domínguez Tejob). The recommendations for Haiti were consulted as part of the 2017–2027 management plan for the Aire Protégée de Ressources Naturelles Gérées des Trois Baies in north-east Haiti (Henwood et al., Reference Henwood, Aucoin and Turner2017), which considers several programmes with objectives and actions relevant to the manatee, such as a permanent closure of the harvesting of marine mammals, the protection of seagrass beds, and the regulation and control of fishing and coastal development. The recommendations were also shared with relevant authorities during the celebration of the first National Manatee Day in the Dominican Republic (Domínguez Tejo et al., Reference Domínguez Tejo, Reynoso, Delance and del Cid2018). The Acuario Nacional and CERREA have since then expressed interest in adopting protocols for the return of rehabilitated manatees to the wild.
Acknowledgements
This research was supported by the Fulbright-MESCyT Program, the Faculty for the Future Fellowship from the Schlumberger Foundation and the Duke Graduate School. I thank the many organizations and colleagues who helped compile manatee sightings in Hispaniola for over a decade (in particular Yolanda León, Mónica Vega, Peter Sánchez, Omar Shamir Reynoso, José Alejandro Alvarez, José A. Ottenwalder and Jean Wiener), and Andy Read and three anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments.
Conflicts of interest
None.
Ethical standards
This study abided by the Oryx guidelines on ethical standards. It was based on a review of documentary archives that were retrieved in the USA and the Dominican Republic. The research did not involve human subjects, animal captures nor the collection of specimens. The results will be made available to government authorities in the Dominican Republic and Haiti upon publication.