Manatees paddle to warm water to escape Fla. chill
                                                      By TAMARA LUSH, Associated Press                    Tamara Lush, Associated Press                                  6 mins ago             APOLLO BEACH, Fla. – People aren't the only  ones in Florida who don't like cold weather. Manatees — those giant  aquatic mammals with the flat, paddle-shaped tails — are swimming out of  the chilly Gulf of Mexico waters and into warmer springs and power  plant discharge canals. On Tuesday, more than 300 manatees floated in  the outflow of Tampa Electric's Big Bend Power Station.
"It's like a warm bathtub for them," said  Wendy Anastasiou, an environmental specialist at the power station's  manatee viewing center. "They come in here and hang out and loll  around." 
Cold weather can weaken manatees' immune  systems and eventually kill them. State officials said 2010 has been a  deadly year for the beloved animals: between Jan. 1 and Dec. 17, 246  manatees died from so-called "cold stress." During the same time period  in 2009, only 55 manatees died from the cold. In 2008, only 22 manatees  succumbed to chilly temperatures. 
Manatee deaths documented from Jan. 1 through  Dec. 5 are nearly double the five-year average for that time period,  according to Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission  statistics.
"Obviously we're very concerned as an agency  about the unusually high number of manatee deaths this year," said Wendy  Quigley, a spokeswoman with the state-run Fish and Wildlife Research  Institute in St. Petersburg.
A total of 699 manatees were found dead  between Jan. 1 and Dec. 5; state officials say it's likely the cold  temperatures also contributed to many of the 203 deaths in the  "undetermined" category and the 68 deaths of manatees whose bodies could  not be recovered.
Quigley noted that the statistics don't even  include this week's cold snap, which sent temperatures plummeting into  the 30s in parts of South Florida overnight and into the teens in the  central part of the state.
Tampa Bay and Gulf water temperatures are  hovering around 50 degrees, said Anastasiou. When the water dips below  68, manatees seek warmer waters — usually springs or the power plant  discharge canals. The water temperature in the power plant's Big Bend  canal ranges from about 65-75 degrees, Anastasiou said. Even though  they're huge animals, manatees are very cold sensitive.
"They're not blubbery mammals. They're very  lean mammals," Anastasiou said. "They need the warmth. They need a warm  place to go."
Sounds a lot like people. 
The herbivores will brave the cold  temperatures to forage for sea grass but will sometimes stay in the warm  canal without eating for days.
Adult manatees can weigh up to 1,200 pounds  and grow to be 10 feet long. During the warmer months, manatees leave  Florida and can be found as far west as Texas and as far north as  Massachusetts — although sightings along the Gulf Coast and near the  Carolinas are also common.
During last year's cold snap, some 329  manatees congregated at the Tampa Electric power station. In Broward  County on Tuesday, some 50 manatees gathered in the outfall of a Florida  Power and Light plant.
State officials are also warning boaters to  slow down and be on the lookout for manatees in the warmer, shallow  water, where the mammals can fall victim to boat propellers. Hundreds  have been spotted in local waters, state wildlife officials said.
Officials say most of the manatees were in  the warmer waters near Florida Power and Light's power plants. However,  some small groups were spotted in the Intracoastal Waterway. 
Meanwhile Tuesday in coastal Mobile, Ala., a 700-pound manatee died during a rescue attempt.
Ruth Carmichael, head of the manatee program  at the Dauphin Island Sea Lab, said she and a team from the Mobile  Manatees Sighting Network wrapped the animal in warm towels when they  were called Saturday to a Mobile Bay beach.
Carmichael said rescuers used a stretcher  made of car towing straps to move the manatee onto a trailer, and had  hoped to haul the animal to the Institute of Marine Mammal Studies in  Gulfport, Miss.
The young male was supposed to have migrated  to Florida waters about two months ago, though it was unclear if the  animal died because of chilly conditions, Carmichael said.