Australian.Geographic_2014_01-02

(Chris Devlin) #1

54 Australian Geographic


 I

T’S AN IDYLLIC spring morning on More-
ton Bay, southern Queensland, and the
clear skies make for perfect conditions
for fi nding mermaids. Flocks of shear-
waters bob on a glassy sea. Green turtles
break the surface at regular intervals for
noisy breaths between dives to graze on seagrass
meadows. Pied cormorants pop up periodically,
their long necks like periscopes on mini-
submarines. Sleek-swimming pods of inquisitive
bottlenose dolphins steer towards our boat.
Photographer Darren Jew and I are not,
of course, expecting to find mermaids, but
instead the creatures that are believed to have
sparked the legends. And soon enough a perfect
ocean-going tail – shaped like a dolphin’s, but
at least a metre wide at its trailing edge – breaks
the water. It waves briefl y, Brisbane’s distant
skyline glistening behind it in the early light.
It’s easy to understand how lonely sailors
from a bygone era might have imagined this
could signal a creature of submerged beauty.
But minutes later we see a face that’s more
Dr Seuss than nereid. Clearly, those old
mariners liked spinning tales, or were heavily
infl uenced by rum and extreme isolation.
The exquisite tail and contrastingly comical
face belong to one of the estimated 800–1000
dugongs in Moreton Bay, which is adjacent to
one of Australia’s most rapidly developing
regions. The creature’s odd-looking head

emerges just long enough to retract the valves
that keep the water from its nostrils while sub-
merged; with a snort like a snorkelling human,
it sucks in a breath of fresh air before quickly
disappearing, either too shy or uninterested to
remain above water long enough to look around.
Limited surface time is a trademark of
dugongs. As well as their tendency to stick to
murky, or turbid, water, it’s one of the main
reasons they’re so elusive – and why few
Australians have ever seen one. Yet they’re the
most common marine mammals in northern
Australia’s coastal waters – outnumbering seals,
whales and even dolphins. They’re also surpris-
ingly big, with adults reaching lengths of about
3m and weights of 400–600kg.

 D


UGONGS OCCUR wherever there are
seagrass meadows, in the tropical and
subtropical waters of about 40 coun-
tries across the Indo-Pacifi c. Australia is the
stronghold for the species: a signifi cant chunk of
the world’s population – an estimated 70,000


  • cruise about in the shallows of at least 10
    dif erent locations along the 25,000km of our
    northern coastline, stretching from Shark Bay,
    Western Australia, to Moreton Bay.
    Torres Strait has the biggest population:
    recent fi gures suggest there are at least 15,000
    of these enigmatic marine mammals.
    Mostly, their diet consists


Shy disposition. Despite being air-breathers, dugongs spend as little time at the
surface as possible, preferring instead to remain in the obscurity of murky waters.

Continued page 58
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