Adopt-A-Manatee® in Partnership with Save the Manatee Club

Friends of Blue Spring State Park is thrilled to partner with Save the Manatee Club and provide the opportunity to adopt a real living manatee! Symbolically adopt or renew an adoption of a real manatee for yourself or as a gift starting at as little as $25 per year!
Adopt-A-Manatee at any level and get:

A photo of the membership materials provided with a manatee adoption through the Adopt-A-Manatee program
  • A certificate of adoption and a biography of a real Florida manatee.
  • A membership handbook containing manatee facts, viewing locations and guidelines, and other educational information.
  • The Manatee Zone, our official quarterly Club newsletter, featuring updates on the adopted manatees and other manatee news.
  • Other organization and manatee updates by email, including our eNewsletter, Paddle Tales (when an email address is provided).


Choose Your Manatee:

Use the navigation below to view manatees available in each region. You can click the manatee's name in the paragraph under their photo to get more information about them. No matter which manatee you choose to adopt, adopting one helps them all.

Alabama | Blue Spring State Park | East Coast
The Florida Keys | Homosassa Springs State Park | West Coast

Blue Spring State Park:

Annie

Annie the manatee
Annie was rescued as an orphaned calf and was released in 2008. She is not shy and is quite popular with park visitors. Annie has been known to visit Blue Spring State Park in the winter.

Aqua

Aqua the manatee
Aqua was first sighted at Blue Spring in December 2011 and has been a regular winter visitor since that time. She is identified by the scars on her left shoulder and has had four known calves.

Brutus

Brutus the manatee
Brutus is one of Blue Spring’s largest manatees. He weighs in at almost 1,900 pounds and has been a regular winter visitor since 1970.

Deep Dent

Deep Dent the manatee
Deep Dent is a medium-sized male who first showed up at Blue Spring State Park in 1979. He has a deep, “dent-like,” propeller wound on his tail.

Doc

Doc the manatee
Doc has returned to Blue Spring State Park nearly every winter since 1976. He is an adult male, nearly 10 feet in length. Doc is one of the few manatees frequently spotted in the spring in the summer.

Flash

Flash the manatee
Flash is a large male manatee first identified in 1977 at Blue Spring State Park. He is shy of human contact and will take off in a “flash” when disturbed.

Floyd

Floyd the manatee
Floyd was born in the summer of 1978. He is easily identified by the park’s rangers because of an old injury that left him with only half a tail.

Gator

Gator the manatee
Gator was first identified in 2011 at Blue Spring State Park. He has been spotted on the webcam chasing and playing with an alligator at the park. That’s how he got his name!

Howie

Howie the manatee
Howie is a sleek, large (1,350-pound) male, known to winter at Blue Spring State Park since 1971. One of Howie’s favorite activities is to tip the research canoe — complete with researchers in it!

Lenny

Lenny the manatee
Lenny was born to Luna in 1978 and continues to winter at Blue Spring State Park each year. Lenny is the resident “couch potato” manatee, preferring rest to all other activities.

Lily

Lily the manatee
Lily is one of the few adult females to regularly winter at the Blue Spring State Park. She has returned each year since 1974 and has at least ten calves.

Lucille

Lucille the manatee
Lucille was born in 1980. Lucille had her first calf at an early age and, in 1993, she became a grandmother. Lucille regularly winters at Blue Spring State Park.

Margarito

Margarito the manatee
Margarito is the son of Lily, another Blue Spring manatee. She brought him to Blue Spring State Park on November 24, 1984, and he has returned every winter since that time.

Merlin

Merlin the manatee
Merlin has been noted at Blue Spring State Park since 1970, when attendance records first began. His nickname is “Tail-End Charlie” as he often arrives late each year. An adult male, Merlin is over 10 feet in length.

Moo Shoo

Moo Shoo the manatee
Moo Shoo is a female manatee first identified in 2010, Moo Shoo loves to nudge the research canoe. She has had four calves.

Nick

Nick the manatee
Nick is a small adult male who was first identified in 1977 at Blue Spring State Park . His movements have been tracked by radio telemetry, producing information on behavior such as going north, rather than south, in midwinter — hence his nickname, “Crazy Nick."

Paddy Doyle

Paddy Doyle the manatee
Paddy Doyle was named by researchers after the famous “fighting Irishman.” He bears the distinction of being one of the feistiest manatees in the Blue Spring State Park area.

Philip

Philip the manatee
Philip was born in the summer of 1982. As a youngster, Philip was one of the most playful manatees at Blue Spring State Park. He also seems to love canoes and follows the research canoe everywhere!

Phyllis

Phyllis the manatee
Phyllis is thought to have been born in 1985. In 1991, Phyllis gave birth to twins — a rare event for manatees. She is now the mother of several calves and a regular winter visitor to the park.

Rocket

Rocket the manatee
Rocket is a male manatee, rescued as a tiny orphan in 2006. He was released with Annie at Blue Spring State Park, and they stayed together for over a year.

Una

Una the manatee
Una was rescued as an orphan in 2003. She was released and gave birth to several calves. Unfortunately, Una was rescued again because of fishing line entanglement on both flippers. Following treatment, she is once again doing well in the wild.

Whiskers

Whiskers the manatee
Whiskers is a male manatee who frequents Blue Spring State Park in the winter. He is the son of Dana, a former Blue Spring adoptee. She introduced him to Blue Spring in 1996, and he has been visiting the park ever since that time.

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Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park:

Ariel and Betsy are permanent residents at the park and can be visited at any time of the year. During the summer they can be seen on our webcams at the park with other manatees in rehabilitation. An adoption update on the Homosassa Springs manatees is included in our quarterly newsletter, The Manatee Zone.

Ariel

Ariel the manatee
Ariel was just two weeks old when she was rescued with her mom Amanda. She lives at the Ellie Schiller Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park. She is a regular at the manatee education programs, lifting her head out of the water to “smile” at the visitors.

Betsy

Betsy the manatee
Betsy was named after Betsy Dearth, who was a ranger at the Ellie Schiller Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park. Betsy the manatee is very friendly and curious and is quick to investigate anything new. Ranger Dearth called her, “the inspector.”

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Tampa Bay:

Manatees who are known to winter near Tampa Bay are sighted intermittently and their behavior is more unpredictable. Sightings are provided as we get information from our partners in our quarterly newsletter, The Manatee Zone, however there may be significant gaps between updates.

Elsie

Elsie the manatee
Elsie is easily identified because her tail is badly mutilated from an encounter with a boat propeller. She has been seen in the Tampa Bay area and has had at least two calves. Once, Elsie was documented traveling a distance of about 111 miles in about 23 days.

Flicker

Flicker the manatee
Flicker is an adult female first documented in 1983 in Ft. Myers. She is named Flicker because she has a series of small propeller scars that reminded researchers of flickering flames. Flicker has been seen at Tampa Electric’s Big Bend power plant in Apollo Beach each winter.

Jemp

Jemp
Jemp was rescued in 1995, after being exposed to red tide. He spent some time in rehabilitation and was released later that year. Jemp is known to frequent the Sarasota and Lemon Bay areas, but he also travels in a wide range along Florida’s west coast.

Vector

Vector the manatee
Vector is a traveling man(atee) and has been known to frequent the Tampa Bay area and along Florida’s west coast. He has been tracked in Florida as far north as the Suwannee River and as far south as the Peace River.

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East Coast:

Like our Tampa Bay adoptees, Manatees who are known to winter along the east coast are sighted intermittently and their behavior is more unpredictable. Sightings are provided as we get information from our partners in our quarterly newsletter, The Manatee Zone, however there may be significant gaps between updates.

Chessie

Chessie the manatee
Chessie was first sighted in the Chesapeake Bay in Maryland in July of 1994. This rare manatee sighting created quite a stir. By October of that year, after it was determined that he was not going to head south on his own, Chessie was rescued and flown back to Florida so he wouldn’t die from cold stress. Chessie has been known to travel along the east coast of Florida and the southeastern coast of the U.S.

Illusion

Illusion the manatee
Illusion was rescued in March 2010 after a terrible boat strike. After being released, she is often seen at the FPL Riviera Beach power plant in the winter and along the east coast of south Florida.

Millie

Vector the manatee
First identified in 1980, Millie is one of the largest manatees ever recorded. She is a traveler with a long sighting history along Florida’s southeast coast. Millie has had several calves and is also a grandmother!

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Alabama:

Sightings of manatees in Alabama typically occur during the summer months when waterways are warm enough to allow manatees to travel. Updates are provided by Dauphin Island Sea Lab's Manatee Sighting Network for our quarterly newsletter, The Manatee Zone, though we may periodically receive an update from a winter refuge in Florida.

Bama

Bama the manatee
Bama made history in September 2009 when she became the first manatee ever captured and tagged in Alabama waters by Dauphin Island Sea Lab’s Manatee Sighting Network. Now a local attraction in Mobile Bay in the spring and summer, Bama has migrated from Alabama to Crystal River, Florida each winter.

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The Florida Keys:

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