Publication | Open Access
The status of the dugong in the southern Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
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1996
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Australia has international responsibilities for the management of dugongs in the Great Barrier Reef \nRegion. One of the World Heritage values of the Region is that it "provides major feeding grounds \nfor large populations of the endangered species Dugong dugon" (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park \nAuthority (GBRMPA) 1981, p. 7). In addition, the dugong has high biodiversity value as the only \nspecies in the Family Dugongidiae and one of only four species in the Order Sirenia. AlI four extant \nspecies of Sirenian are listed as vulnerable to extinction by the IUCN (IUCN 1990). \nIn 1986 and 1987, Marsh and Saalfeld (1990 a) counted dugongs, dolphins and sea t1\\l11es during an \naerial survey over an area of some 39,000 km' in the inshore waters of the Great Barrier Reef \nMarine Park south of Cape Bedford. Survey-and-taxon specific correction factors were used to \ncorrect for perception bias (the proportion of animals visible in the transect which are missed by \nobservers) and to standardise for availability bias (the prop0l1ion of animals that are invisible due to \nwater turbidity).