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Manatees swim near the sanctuary at the entrance to Three Sisters Springs in Crystal River, Florida. Photograph: Ocala Star-Banner /Landov / Barc
Manatees swim near the sanctuary at the entrance to Three Sisters Springs in Crystal River, Florida. Photograph: Ocala Star-Banner /Landov / Barc

Manatees show up in North Carolina again as more 'sea cows' leave Florida

This article is more than 8 years old
  • The ‘sea cows’ have also traveled north to Georgia and even Virginia
  • There have been nine sightings in North Carolina this year

Researchers say manatees have again been spotted in the marinas and waters in south-eastern North Carolina – far from their natural Florida habitat.

The StarNews of Wilmington reported that local researchers have found that the manatees have travelled north to Georgia, the Carolinas and even Virginia.

Erin Cummings with the University of North Carolina Wilmington has charted the “sea cows” in North Carolina waters since the 1990s. Cummings says manatees have been reported in North Carolina dating to the 1930s.

She says manatees swim through open ocean, the Atlantic intracoastal waterway, sounds, bays, rivers and creeks searching for sea grass.

Cummings says there have been nine manatee sightings in North Carolina this year. She thinks there could be a couple of dozen in North Carolina waters.

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