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AuthorMarshall C.D.
AuthorAl Ansi M.
AuthorDupont J.
AuthorWarren C.
AuthorAl Shaikh I.
AuthorCullen J.
Available date2020-03-03T06:19:03Z
Publication Date2018
Publication NameMarine Mammal Science
ResourceScopus
ISSN8240469
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mms.12497
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/13112
AbstractDugongs (Dugong dugon) are large herbivorous marine mammals of the order Sirenia commonly referred to as sea cows. Due to their herbivorous diet, feeding and foraging dominate their natural history. Dugongs have evolved a specialized feeding apparatus for efficient grazing and processing of sea grass, which can occur by cropping blades or the excavation of roots and rhizomes (Marsh et al. 1999; Marshall et al. 2003; Lanyon and Sanson 2006a, b). The excavation of seagrasses results in signature benthic feeding trails in which 60%–90% of the vegetation may be removed (Heinsohn et al. 1977; Preen 1992, 1995; Marsh et al. 2011). Sediment plumes from dugong foraging are easily observed during aerial surveys. Due to their low reproductive output, dugongs are vulnerable to perturbations in their environment, such as habitat degradation, fisheries bycatch and contaminants (Baldwin and Cockcroft 1997, Marsh et al. 2011, Reynolds and Marshall 2012) from which populations may be slow to recover.
Languageen
PublisherBlackwell Publishing Inc.
SubjectLarge dugong
coastal Qatar
TitleLarge dugong (Dugong dugon) aggregations persist in coastal Qatar
TypeArticle
Pagination1154 - 1163
Issue Number4
Volume Number34
dc.accessType Abstract Only


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