Abstract
Observational techniques were tested and observations made along the eastern shore of Dirk Hartog I.
in June and July of 1979. Dugongs could be closely approached by boats and divers in water with 3-5 m
subsurface visibility. Dugongs detected objects in the water from much greater distances and approached
and investigated boats and divers visually. This behaviour was highly stereotyped, and because other
behaviours did not occur in proximity to boats or divers the effectiveness of surface and subsurface
behavioural observation, photography, and attempts to catalogue individuals on the basis of distinguishing
scars and other features was limited. Observation from shoreside cliffs was more productive.
Vocalizations attributable to dugongs were not detected by hydrophones. Dugongs may vocalize only
under exceptional circumstances. When feeding on the seagrass Amphibolis antarctica dugongs strip
leaves from stalks, but do not dig into the substrate. Calves may ride on the backs of attending cows.
Calves suckle beneath the surface, lying beside the cow and behind her axilla. Dugongs and dolphins
interact, and harassment of a dugong cow and calf by a dolphin terminated when other dugongs interposed.
Dugongs avoided a boat approaching at moderate speed, but did not take evasive action when
the same boat approached at high speed.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
22 articles.
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