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  • 00:02

    Coming up, Jonathan travels to the Philippines in a search for the elusive Dugong!

  • 00:09

    Welcome to Jonathan Bird’s Blue World!

  • 00:25

    In the waters of Florida and the Caribbean, there exists a gentle marine mammal called

  • 00:31

    a manatee.

  • 00:32

    Because they often live inshore--close to people--and have enjoyed more than 40 years

  • 00:37

    of protection from hunting or harassment, manatees are often quite friendly.

  • 00:43

    Many of them have become acclimated to gentle interactions with people.

  • 00:49

    DUGONG But the manatee has a wild cousin, called

  • 00:55

    a Dugong, living far away, in the Indo-Pacific Ocean.

  • 00:59

    This animal is still hunted in much of its range.

  • 01:03

    It’s shy and hard to approach.

  • 01:07

    Wary of humans.

  • 01:09

    And exceptionally rare to see underwater.

  • 01:14

    Which is why I have come to the Philippines, one of a handful of places in the world, where

  • 01:20

    there are enough dugongs left to have a chance of seeing one in the wild!

  • 01:25

    I’m heading to Busuanga, in Palawan, Philippines, a remote and beautiful area where the endangered

  • 01:32

    dugong still roams wild.

  • 01:35

    But I didn’t come alone.

  • 01:38

    Award-winning IMAX filmmaking team Howard and Michele Hall have joined me on this trip.

  • 01:44

    They have been here before, and agreed to give me a hand with this daunting and challenging

  • 01:49

    assignment.

  • 01:51

    Our journey begins with a flight from the capital city of Manila down to Busuanga, then

  • 01:57

    a drive from the local airport to the water.

  • 02:01

    Next we take a ferry ride across the bay to our home-away-from-home, El Rio Y Mar Resort,

  • 02:08

    on the north side of Busuanga.

  • 02:10

    We arrive just after sunset in time for dinner.

  • 02:14

    The next morning, we awake to fog in the nearby hills, and our dive boat, a traditional Philippino

  • 02:22

    Bangka, ready to go.

  • 02:24

    We get our gear together and load the boat.

  • 02:27

    It’s going to be a long day.

  • 02:33

    Good morning!

  • 02:41

    In the experienced hands of captains Benny Martinez and Wilmar Bansilan, we set out on

  • 02:47

    our first day of adventure.

  • 02:52

    Dugongs are wild animals that roam the ocean freely, and it’s a big ocean.

  • 02:59

    But we know where they saw dugongs recently, so at least we know where to start looking.

  • 03:04

    Unfortunately that spot is two hours away!

  • 03:09

    Since it’s going to be a while, Howard and Michele do the only logical thing: take a

  • 03:14

    nap!

  • 03:16

    I’ve never been here before, so I spend some time watching the scenery go by.

  • 03:23

    I am always amazed by the natural beauty of the Philippines—lush, green hills surrounded

  • 03:30

    by beautiful warm water filled with untold species of animals to be discovered and filmed!

  • 03:38

    Eventually we make it to the area where some dugongs were last seen, and we start looking.

  • 03:45

    With experienced eyes, divemasters Omar Linsangan and Bryan Deramas begin scanning the surface

  • 03:52

    of the water.

  • 03:54

    Dugongs are solitary animals, so they are looking for just one.

  • 03:58

    It’s like finding a needle in a haystack.

  • 04:01

    After driving around looking for an hour, at last, we spot a dugong!

  • 04:15

    There is no time to waste in suiting up and getting into the water.

  • 04:20

    We don’t really need to make a stealthy water entry because we are anchored really

  • 04:24

    far from the dugong.

  • 04:28

    We will swim several hundred yards to reach the dugong because the boat spooks them.

  • 04:39

    We follow Bryan for a few minutes, looking around carefully in anticipation of finding

  • 04:45

    the dugong!

  • 04:48

    Finally we find it, and Howard takes the lead, sneaking up on her, while she’s sleeping.

  • 04:53

    The master at work.

  • 04:56

    The dugong is covered in remoras, suction-cup equipped fish that hang around larger animals

  • 05:03

    for scraps.

  • 05:04

    But why are there so many around this dugong?

  • 05:09

    Michele films from above for a shot of me and Howard inching closer and closer to the

  • 05:14

    dugong, hoping it will tolerate our presence.

  • 05:18

    But when the dugong wakes up and finds two cameras in its face, the scene is over as

  • 05:25

    it swims away.

  • 05:29

    This is definitely going to be more work than filming manatees in Florida!

  • 05:36

    With Howard and Michele leading, we head back to the boat.

  • 05:43

    With the light fading, it’s time to head for home.

  • 05:54

    Back at the resort, we enjoy a beautiful Philippines sunset and get a good night’s sleep.

  • 06:01

    The next morning, we’re heading back, cameras at the ready.

  • 06:04

    We find a dugong quickly this time, so we get suited up and into the water as fast as

  • 06:13

    we can.

  • 06:19

    Today is nice and sunny, and the water is a little clearer on an incoming tide.

  • 06:29

    Omar leads us to the dugong and this time we get lucky.

  • 06:35

    The dugong is actively feeding, and fortunately he is more interested in food than us, so

  • 06:42

    as I sneak up close for some shots, he doesn’t seem to mind.

  • 06:49

    Like manatees, dugongs are herbivores—they eat only plants.

  • 06:54

    And their favorite plants to eat are sea grasses that grow in the sandy sea floor in shallow

  • 07:00

    water where there is plenty of light.

  • 07:10

    While there is no shortage of this aquatic salad for dugongs to eat, it’s not exactly

  • 07:15

    dense in nutritional value.

  • 07:18

    So dugongs need to spend more than half their lives chomping away at sea grasses, and packing

  • 07:24

    in nearly 100 pounds of it a day.

  • 07:29

    Dugongs and manatees are in fact the only completely herbivorous marine mammals.

  • 07:35

    So, in spite of reaching the length and weight of a small car, dugongs are completely harmless.

  • 07:44

    A school of Golden trevally are hanging around because as the dugong feeds, he scares up

  • 07:52

    shrimp and other creatures hiding in the sand.

  • 07:54

    It’s an easy feast for the fish.

  • 08:05

    The dugong also has those other freeloaders…more than a dozen remoras are hanging onto him

  • 08:12

    and following along.

  • 08:13

    They must drive the poor dugong absolutely crazy, because every once in a while he engages

  • 08:20

    in an elaborate ritual to try to rid himself of some of them.

  • 08:26

    It starts with some acrobatics—rolling and twisting in the sand.

  • 08:42

    The acrobatics kicks up a bunch of silt and reduces the visibility to near zero in a giant

  • 08:49

    cloud around the dugong.

  • 09:40

    Once the dust cloud reaches epic proportions, he shoots out of the cloud and zooms away

  • 09:46

    at up to 15 miles per hour (which is actually pretty fast underwater) and literally leaves

  • 09:53

    the remoras in the dust!

  • 09:57

    Unfortunately, the remoras always seem to catch up again.

  • 10:03

    I keep watching because I really want to know why so many remoras hang around.

  • 10:09

    What is their interest in the dugong?

  • 10:14

    Then I see it, and it’s pretty disgusting.

  • 10:18

    The remoras eat the dugong’s poop.

  • 10:25

    Dugongs eat a lot, so they poop a lot.

  • 10:29

    For the remoras, the dugong is like a swimming poop vending machine.

  • 10:40

    If you are what you eat, that explains why even sharks won’t eat remoras!

  • 10:49

    Like dolphins and whales, dugongs are mammals.

  • 10:52

    Their ancient ancestors once lived on land.

  • 10:56

    But in spite of their similarity to whales, dugongs and manatees are more closely related

  • 11:01

    to elephants.

  • 11:02

    Since they’re mammals, they must rise to the surface to breathe every few minutes.

  • 11:09

    While the dugong can hold its breath for 15 minutes, they tend to breathe much more frequently

  • 11:16

    than that--every 3-6 minutes.

  • 11:45

    In spite of their similarity, dugongs and manatees have one striking difference.

  • 11:50

    The tail of a dugong looks like the fluke of a whale or a dolphin.

  • 11:56

    A manatee on the other hand, has a rounded, paddle-like tail.

  • 12:01

    While the manatee lives around the Caribbean, the dugong has a huge range spreading across

  • 12:05

    the tropical Pacific and Indian oceans, all the way up into the Red Sea and Arabian gulf.

  • 12:11

    The dugong is highly endangered in its entire range, but the strongest holdouts of stable

  • 12:16

    populations are in northern Australia and the Arabian Gulf.

  • 12:22

    Most countries now protect the dugong, and ever so slowly, its numbers are growing, bringing

  • 12:28

    this remarkable, harmless--and I would say adorable--marine mammal back from the brink

  • 12:34

    of extinction.

  • 12:38

    As our new friend settles back into a nap, pestered by his annoying poop-eating remora

  • 12:48

    freeloaders, I watch for a while, having finally gained his trust.

  • 13:02

    But then, with our scuba tanks getting low, it’s time for the long swim back to the

  • 13:06

    boat.

  • 13:07

    It took me 20 years to finally see a dugong in the wild.

  • 13:15

    But with continued protection, it is my fervent hope that dugongs will be much easier for

  • 13:21

    future generations to see, here in the wild Blue World.

All

The example sentences of FREELOADERS in videos (2 in total of 2)

the determiner dugong noun, singular or mass also adverb has verb, 3rd person singular present those determiner other adjective freeloaders noun, plural more adjective, comparative than preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner dozen noun, singular or mass remoras noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present hanging verb, gerund or present participle onto preposition or subordinating conjunction him personal pronoun
of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner organisms noun, plural that preposition or subordinating conjunction live adjective in preposition or subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction on preposition or subordinating conjunction us personal pronoun , not adverb just adverb as preposition or subordinating conjunction freeloaders noun, plural , but coordinating conjunction potentially adverb as preposition or subordinating conjunction part noun, singular or mass

Use "freeloaders" in a sentence | "freeloaders" example sentences

How to use "freeloaders" in a sentence?

  • Unemployment insurance is a pre-paid vacation for freeloaders.
    -Ronald Reagan-

Definition and meaning of FREELOADERS

What does "freeloaders mean?"

/ˈfrēˌlōdər/

noun
person who takes advantage of others' generosity without giving anything in return.
other
One taking money, food etc. from someone.