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Cape manatee headed for SeaWorld in Orlando
Manatee rescued from Sesuit Harbor this morning
Wayward animal, dubbed Dennis, will be driven to SeaWorld Orlando

Rescue workers tend to Dennis the manatee, rescued Saturday from Sesuit Harbor.
Story and photos by James Kinsella
Dennis, the young male manatee who quickly achieved celebrity status in his autumn visit to Cape waters, was fetched from Sesuit Harbor on Saturday morning and placed in a truck for a 20-hour ride to SeaWorld Orlando in Florida.
Rescue workers from SeaWorld, the International Fund for Animal Welfare, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service took about four hours to find Dennis, corral him, capture him in a purse seine net, lift him with a crane onto a mooring barge and take him to a landing, where a forklift brought him to the Penske rental truck in which the animal will travel to Florida.

Click here to see David Curran's video.
IFAW officials estimated that the manatee weighs between 800 and 1,000 pounds, and is about eight feet long.
Jon Peterson, supervisor of animal care at SeaWorld, said the manatee appeared to be in good shape. Peterson said Dennis showed signs of "mild cold stress" that consisted of slight discolorations at the animal's head and tail.
A health assessment was planned for the animal.
If Dennis truly was in good shape, the truck would leave for Florida as quickly as possible.
The stress is a reaction to the Cape's relatively cold water. Yesterday the temperature in Sesuit Harbor was 64 degrees, compared with the 76-degree water in which manatees more typically are found.
Manatees, also known as sea cows, are protected under the federal Marine Mammal Act and the federal Endangered Species Act.
The animals are slow-moving, amiable, curious creatures that subsist on vegetation. They are at special risk for collision with boats.
Spectators began arriving before 6:15 a.m., while it was still dark. By the time workers brought Dennis out of the water and onto land, around 10 a.m. hundreds of people were watching the rescue. At the request of the rescue workers and accompanying volunteers, the spectators kept applause, cheering and even loud talking to a minimum so as not to bother or disturb the animal.
The rescuers initially had hoped to transport Dennis to Florida in an airplane. But A.J. Cady, a director at IFAW, said no appropriate airplane was available yesterday to transport the manatee.
A four-member crew from SeaWorld will accompany Dennis on his trip to Florida, with two riding with the manatee in the back and two riding up front. The pairs will switch off.
Workers transfer manatee from boat.
IFAW, which is based in Yarmouth Port, had been tracking the manatee in recent weeks. The animal, which is far north of its usual American habitat off Florida and Georgia, moved from the Fall River area, around the tip of the Cape in Provincetown, and down to Cape Cod's northern shore.
For the past few days, the animal had been in staying in Sesuit Harbor and nearby marshes.
Concerns that the cool water was hurting Dennis's health led the rescuers to push up the tentative timetable to get him out by Saturday.
Peterson said SeaWorld's mission is "rescue, rehabilitation and release." As such, SeaWorld plans to return Dennis to the ocean at some point, but Peterson couldn't say when.
No estimate was available yesterday from rescue officials on the cost of the effort. Extensive use of volunteers helped hold down costs, they said.
Asked the impetus for the rescue, Cady replied, "It's a threatened species, number one. And it's part of the natural heritage of the world and this planet. It's part of the natural diversity.... [To] reach out and rescue another creature is special."

Workers guide sling containing manatee to truck that will drive animal to Florida.
17 comments
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Dennis bit the big one!!
No calling hours. Can you just get a pic of the rescue truck. $19.95 for a local move. Where is the expertise of the AFAWE or whoever was in charge of taking on this trip to Sea World.??
RIP ol'buddy
Send donations now-
We'll save some-
But not all-
Salvation is at hand-
Pray with us-
Heating bills are expected to rise-
Save the animals-
Send donations now-
I think that this is all done with grants and donations (like of like Politicans get)
We knew Dennis would die on route or be given the needle if he showed any signs of suffering. THE OLDEST living Manatee was born in 1948 and is still going strong. I think that Dennis was special needs and should of been taken locally to someplace. NOT put on some truck and sprayed with water (dumb move on their part) It makes sense traveling to florida is more stressful than cold water and no water. It got them lots of good PR and I am sure it helps them like when they stopped the seals being clubbed and now they ate all the fish in Canada. I am a big animal lover but they have to use their heads and look out for the animals not their own pay checks.
Why didn't they send him to NE Aquarium in with specialized equipment, was WHOI staff involved? Someone screwed up. Too bad, this happened. Egos get in the way many times. Are those people at ifaw any good? Only praise I ever hear about them comes from their own staff.
Let the blame game begin...hey cru? Who screwed up?
The manatee was suffering from "cold stress" it's body temperature was falling and it was a mater of time before certain death. I think the rescuers made a valiant attempt to save the animal.
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