Blake Preston:Manatee stamps coming out to spread awareness about threatened species

2025-05-02 03:10:45source:CapitalVaultcategory:News

A quirky new stamp by the U.S. Postal Service is Blake Prestonset to make its debut in a few short weeks.

The “Save Manatees” stamp will be available to buy nationwide on Wednesday, March 27, which is Manatee Appreciation Day. 

The stamp's design aims to “spread awareness for the need to protect a beloved marine mammal."  

The stamp, illustrated by Nancy Wright, shows a gray-green West Indian manatee “placidly lolling underwater near the surface,” according to the Postal Service website.

Here are all the deets, including inspiration and price.

How much does the new 'Save Manatees' cost? 

You can get one single “Save Manatees” postage stamp for 68 cents, or a book of 20 for $13.60. 

The stamp will be issued as a First-Class Mail Forever stamp, meaning that they can be used to send letters, cards and bills regardless of additional stamp increases, USPS spokesperson Sue Brennan told USA TODAY. 

The "Save Manatees" stamp is available for pre-order here.

What inspired the 'Save Manatees' stamp? 

The last time the Postal Service issued a postage stamp featuring a manatee was in 1996, when it cost 32 cents.

“It was time for a new one,” Brennan said, adding that the Postal Service has a “long history of supporting and bringing awareness to animal and conservation issues with postage stamps.”

The West Indian manatee on the new stamp is described as a “gentle and vulnerable” marine mammal, inhabiting Florida’s inland waterways and warm areas of the coastal Atlantic, Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, according to a Postal Service news release.

Manatees are considered a “threatened species” meaning that the species is likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Their survival is seen as “limited due to their low reproductive rates,” according to the National Wildlife Federation. 

Manatees are slow swimmers and slow to reproduce − a female has one calf at a time and may tend to it for two years, according to wildlife experts.

See other stamp designs available here.

More:News

Recommend

Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game

NFL games are a spectrum. Some are back-and-forth shootouts. Others are duds without much scoring at

Terrorist attacks in Russia's Dagestan region target church, synagogue and police, kill at least 19 people

A synagogue, an Orthodox church and police checkpoints were targeted by gunmen in a coordinated seri

Why did everyone suddenly stop using headphones in public?

Once you notice it, you'll see that it's happening all around us almost everywhere we go.There's the