In The Mauritius
Command, the doctor is called on deck with a cry of "mermaid on
the starboard bow". After looking his fill, the doctor comments to
a shipmate, who replies "it was only a manatee (Trichechus, species
various)". The doctor answers "A dugong (Halicore, species
various) surely. The dentition is quite distinct from that of
the manatee: the manatee, as I recall, has no incisors. Furthermore,
the whole breadth of Africa separates their respective realms."
From these drawings, we can see that more than the dentition
distinguishes between dugongs and manatees. The head, tail, and flippers
provide easy identification, as does size. Manatees are usually between
7 and 12 ft long, while dugongs average 5 to 9 ft. All sirenians
are vegetarians; in fact they are the only group of sea mammals that are.
The fossil specimen is of a sirenian, the ancestor of both
the manatee and dugongs. This is a great example of speciation, also known
as vicariance, as predicted by Darwin. The ancestral form occupied
the tropical waters worldwide. But as plate tectonics began moving South
America northward, the populations in the Pacific and Indian Oceans became
separated from the population in the Atlantic. When they could no
longer interbreed, each group evolved into separate genera.
(If you are wondering what the guy with the hose is doing,
that's a photograph behind the exhibit showing fossil excavation techniques.)
The Doctor was able to see an
even more unusual animal in Australia.