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Journal ArticleDOI

Breeding Cycle, Life History and Population Dynamics of the Dugong, Dugon dugon (Sirenia: Dugongidae

Helene Marsh, +2 more
- 01 Jan 1984 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 6, pp 767-788
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TLDR
Study of the gonads of 108 dugongs from north Queensland indicates that neither females nor males are continuously in breeding condition, suggesting that the gonadal activity of males in a population is not synchronized.
Abstract
Study of the gonads of 108 dugongs from north Queensland indicates that neither females nor males are continuously in breeding condition. The gonadal activity of males in a population is not synchronized. Ovaries tend to be active in the latter half of the year. There is no evidence for females coming into oestrus soon after giving birth but conception can occur during lactation. In the Townsville-Cairns area, dugongs calve from August-September through December. Neonates are between 1.0 and 1.3 m long and weigh 20-35 kg. Dugongs of both sexes less than 2.2 m long are likely to be immature, those over 2.5 m long are probably mature, and the status of animals between 2.2 and 2.5 m long is uncertain. The pre-reproductive period seems to be very variable but is a minimum of 9-10 years for both sexes. The gestation period is about 1 year and lactation can last at least 1.5 years. The usual litter size is one. The secondary and tertiary sex ratios are 1:1. Estimates of the calving interval based on pregnancy rates, the rate of accumulation of placental scars, and calf counts from aerial surveys and photographs, range from 3 to 7 years for various populations. A simple population model has been used to calculate the relationship between calving interval and adult mortality rate for stationary populations with different pre-reproductive periods and juvenile mortality rates. Even the most optimistic schedule of reproduction and juvenile mortality demands an adult survivorship of about 90% per year for population maintenance.

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Dugong : status report and action plans for countries and territories

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a global overview of the status of the dugong and its management throughout its range, which contains information on dugong distribution and abundance, threatening processes, legislation and existing and suggested research and management initiatives for the countries and territories in the known range.
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Living on the edge: dugongs prefer to forage in microhabitats that allow escape from rather than avoidance of predators

TL;DR: It is concluded that dugongs manage their probability of death by allocating more time to safe but lower-quality feeding microhabitats when the likelihood of encountering sharks is elevated.
Journal ArticleDOI

New Protocetid Whale from the Middle Eocene of Pakistan: Birth on Land, Precocial Development, and Sexual Dimorphism

TL;DR: Discovery of a near-term fetus positioned for head-first delivery provides important evidence that early protocetid whales gave birth on land and corroborates previous ideas that protocETids were amphibious.
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Distribution, abundance and conservation status of dugongs and dolphins in the southern and western Arabian Gulf

TL;DR: The marine mammals of Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) were censussed by three strip-transect aerial surveys as discussed by the authors, which indicated a population decline of 71%.
References
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East African mammals : an atlas of evolution in Africa

TL;DR: Two volumes on the bovids include a reappraisal of bovid taxonomy and original analyses of the form and function of body shape and size, horn shape, coat pattern, and tooth structure.
Book

Mathematical Models for the Growth of Human Populations

J. H. Pollard
TL;DR: The stochastic version of Leslie's model and Hierarchical population models and recruitment are compared to the deterministic population models of T. Malthus, A. R. Sharpe and A. Lotka.