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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DugongDugong - Wikipedia

    The dugong (/ ˈd (j) uːɡɒŋ /; Dugong dugon) is a marine mammal. It is one of four living species of the order Sirenia, which also includes three species of manatees.

  2. Aug 9, 2017 · Dugong (Dugong dugon). Image credit: Dan Sheridan. Dugongs are born with smooth pale skin but all eventually develop scars —the result of the tusks of adult males. Because they often fight each other, male dugongs have scarring from the middle of their back down to their tails.

  3. The dugong is an aquatic mammal with thick, tough, and smooth skin. The skin color of newborn dugongs is pale cream, darkening as they age, becoming deep slate gray on the sides and dorsum. The body of the dugong is sparsely covered with hair, and the muzzle exhibits bristles.

  4. Dugong images (Dugong dugon) - stock photos, illustrations & facts of the only surviving herbivorous marine mammal family of Dugongidae Conservation status | Vulnerable Scientific classification | Kingdom: Animalia > Phylum: Chordata > Class: Mammalia > Order: Sirenia > Family: Dugongidae > Subfamily: Dugonginae > Genus: Dugong > Species: D. dug...

  5. Apr 5, 2024 · One Earth’s “Species of the Week” series highlights an iconic species that represents the unique biogeography of each of the 185 bioregions of the Earth. If an elephant, a hippopotamus, a dolphin, and a manatee magically merged into one creature, it might look like a dugong.

  6. The dugong is a large marine mammal found in the coastal waters of the western Indo-Pacific and Australia. It closely resembles a manatee and is also called sea cow because it is the only marine mammal to graze exclusively on plants. Adults can reach over nine feet long and weigh close to 2,000 lb.

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  8. Dugongs are cousins of manatees and share a similar plump appearance, but have a dolphin fluke-like tail. And unlike manatees, which use freshwater areas, the dugong is strictly a marine mammal. Commonly known as "sea cows," dugongs graze peacefully on sea grasses in shallow coastal waters of the Indian and western Pacific Oceans.