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  1. Oct 4, 2019 · Dugongs are strict herbivores that feed on seagrass, especially the Hydrocharitaceae and Potamogetonaceae family of seagrasses. They prefer seagrasses that are low in fiber content, high in nitrogen, and easily digestible. Their intestines are long and suitable for digesting seagrass, and their metabolism rate is low. When seagrass is scarce ...

  2. www.dugongconservation.org › about › about-dugongsAbout Dugong & Seagrass

    Dugongs can remain underwater for 3 to 12 minutes while feeding and travelling. They can eat up to 40 kilograms of seagrasses per day. Dugongs are seagrass community specialists and their range is broadly coincident with the distribution of seagrasses in the tropical and sub-tropical Indo-West Pacific.

  3. Dugongs are herbivores (graminivores) and primarily feed on seagrass. They will occasionally eat invertebrates such as jellyfish, sea squirts, and shellfish. Populations in Moreton Bay, Australia, feed on invertebrates such as polychaetes or marine algae.

  4. Dugongs are herbivores, which means they only eat plants. Their main diet is seagrass and they eat a lot of it. They can eat up to 40kg of seagrass every day. Mammals are warm-blooded animals with backbones. They are different from other classes of animals because their babies are born alive and suckle milk from their mothers.

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  5. Dugongs graze on a variety of seagrass species, preferring those that are higher in nutrient content. Dugongs use their bristled, muscular snouts to dig up seagrasses from the seabed. They can consume large quantities of seagrass daily, often leaving behind feeding trails on the seafloor.

    • Mammalia (Mammals)
    • Chordata
    • Sirenia
  6. Since dugongs are herbivores, their diet consists exclusively of seagrass. They are often referred to as “sea cows” because of their grazing habit below the waves. Dugongs live in very shallow, temperate water where seagrass flourishes, and they need to eat plenty of it to stay healthy.

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  8. Nov 19, 2024 · Dugongs seem to prefer the more delicate forms of seagrass often found at greater depths (as deep as 37 metres [120 feet]) and leave feeding trails along the seafloor. One possible function of feeding in herds may be to maintain seagrass meadows at their most nutritious stages of growth.

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