For thousands of years, Dugong has been hunted for its oil and meat.
Dugongs are also true vegeterians who mostly
feed on sea grass.
Despite their large size, Dugongs mostly eat sea grass.
The Dugong has been hunted for thousands of years for its meat
and oil.
Turtles, Dugongs, and fish were caught with nets
or harpooned from single outrigger canoes.
For thousands of years, the Dugong has been hunted for its meat and oil.
Some of the larger islands also feature
forest reserves sheltering rare species, while Dugong swim in the surrounding waters.
Fish a safe distance from marine animals(such as dolphins, whales,
turtles, and Dugongs) and bird roosting or nesting areas.
A particularly dramatic example of this trend is the demise of Steller's sea cow,
a giant relative of the Dugong formerly at home in the arctic Atlantic;