Why India’s Dugongs Are Declining: Threats, Habitat Loss & Conservation Efforts

Dugongs

Dugong Latest News

  • A recent IUCN report released at the Conservation Congress in Abu Dhabi warns that India’s dugongs (sea cows) face a growing risk of extinction. 
  • Found mainly in the Gulf of Kutch, Gulf of Mannar–Palk Bay, and the Andaman & Nicobar Islands, their survival outlook is grim: long-term survival in the Gulf of Kutch is “highly uncertain,” conditions in the Andamans are “challenging,” and populations in the Gulf of Mannar–Palk Bay have significantly declined.
  • Dugongs are listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List and enjoy the highest protection in India under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, which bans hunting and trade. 
  • These gentle marine herbivores play a crucial ecological role by maintaining healthy seagrass meadows, which support biodiversity and store carbon.
  • However, dugongs face numerous threats, including coastal habitat degradation, seagrass loss, fishing-net entanglement, boat collisions, pollution, and human disturbances. 
  • The Indian government has initiated conservation. Despite this, the new report indicates that urgent and strengthened action is needed to prevent their decline from becoming irreversible.

Dugongs: The Gentle ‘Sea Cows’ of the Coast

  • Dugongs (Dugong dugon) are large, gentle marine mammals often linked to mermaid legends due to their calm, graceful behaviour. 
  • Closely related to manatees, they have a rounded body and a dolphin-like tail. Adults can grow up to 10 feet long and weigh around 420 kg.
  • Exclusively herbivorous, dugongs feed mainly on seagrass meadows, consuming 30–40 kg daily — earning them the name sea cows
  • They inhabit shallow, warm coastal waters, typically in sheltered bays, lagoons, and estuaries less than 10 metres deep.

Why Dugongs Matter: Guardians of Seagrass and Coastal Productivity

  • Dugongs are vital to the health of seagrass ecosystems, which are among the planet’s most efficient carbon sinks
  • Their grazing naturally prunes seagrass, removes old shoots, prevents overgrowth, and enhances carbon storage in the sediment.
  • By stirring up the seagrass beds while feeding, dugongs also release nutrients trapped in the sediment. 
  • These nutrients support a wide range of marine life, including commercially valuable fish, shellfish, sea cucumbers, and other invertebrates.
  • Research shows that seagrass habitats with dugongs generate at least ₹2 crore more fish production annually, while areas lacking dugongs show significantly reduced productivity.
  • In essence, dugongs are ecosystem engineers that boost biodiversity, sustain fisheries, and support coastal carbon cycles.

Declining Dugong Numbers

  • Once common in Indian waters, dugongs have declined drastically. A 2012 government report estimated around 200 individuals. 
  • Current estimates vary: some experts suggest 400–450, while others believe the number is below 250. 
  • Their elusive nature and murky habitats make accurate counts difficult.

Where Dugongs Survive in India

  • Palk Bay–Gulf of Mannar (Tamil Nadu): Largest and most stable group, 150–200 dugongs
  • Andaman & Nicobar Islands: Fewer than 50 individuals
  • Gulf of Kutch (Gujarat): Fewer than 20 individuals
  • These populations are small, fragmented, and highly vulnerable.

Human Activities Driving the Decline

  • The main threats come from coastal degradation and human activities:
    • Fishing-net entanglement is the most common cause of death.
    • High turbidity, pollution, and bycatch threaten dugongs in the Gulf of Kutch and Tamil Nadu.
    • Andamans face high fisheries-related mortality.
  • Industrial discharge, agricultural runoff, and untreated wastewater also pollute seagrass meadows — dugongs’ primary feeding grounds.

Toxic Pollution Found in Dugong Tissues

  • A recent study analysing 46 stranded dugongs found dangerous levels of arsenic, cadmium, chromium, mercury, and lead in organs such as liver, kidneys, and muscles. 
  • These metals accumulate in seagrass sediments, indicating severe ecosystem contamination.

Slow Reproduction Increases Extinction Risk

  • Dugongs reproduce very slowly — females give birth once every several years. 
  • This low reproductive rate hampers population recovery and makes the species extremely vulnerable to ongoing threats.

Government Efforts to Protect Dugongs — and What More Is Needed

  • India has taken several steps to conserve dugongs. In 2010, the Centre set up a Task Force for Dugong Conservation, followed by a national dugong recovery programme in collaboration with Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, and the Andaman & Nicobar Islands. 
  • A major milestone was the creation of the 448 sq km Dugong Conservation Reserve in Palk Bay (2022) to safeguard seagrass meadows and dependent dugong populations.
  • However, experts say conservation efforts need strengthening. Researchers call for better monitoring, reduced fishing pressure, and incentive-based programmes for coastal communities. 
  • While progress has been made, dugong populations will recover only with sustained, strengthened, and community-inclusive conservation actions.

Source: IE | MB

Dugong FAQs

Q1: Why are India’s dugongs declining?

Ans: Dugongs are declining due to seagrass loss, coastal degradation, fishing-net entanglement, pollution, boat strikes and slow reproduction, making the species vulnerable across fragmented habitats.

Q2: Where are dugongs found in India?

Ans: They survive mainly in the Palk Bay–Gulf of Mannar, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, and Gulf of Kutch, with populations small, isolated, and under increasing ecological stress.

Q3: Why are dugongs important for marine ecosystems?

Ans: Dugongs maintain healthy seagrass meadows, enhance carbon storage, release nutrients that support fish and invertebrates, and significantly boost coastal fisheries and biodiversity.

Q4: What major threats do dugongs face today?

Ans: Key threats include fishing-net bycatch, pollution, industrial waste, seagrass degradation, toxic metals in sediments, high turbidity, and reproductive rates too slow for population recovery.

Q5: What conservation measures has India taken?

Ans: India created a national recovery programme, formed a Task Force, and established a 448-sq-km Dugong Conservation Reserve, but experts urge stronger monitoring and reduced bycatch.

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