Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-02T22:54:58.079Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Wildlife Conservation in the Line Islands, Republic of Kiribati (formerly Gilbert Islands)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

Roger Perry
Affiliation:
Trapalanda, Bradfield St George, Suffolk IP30 OAY, United Kingdom; formerly of UNESCO and the Charles Darwin Research Station, Galápagos Islands.

Extract

Important colonies of seabirds occur on all eight islands comprising the Line group of the Republic of Kiribati, the former Gilbert Islands. The greatest density and diversity is reached on Christmas Island, the principal island of the group, with 18 regularly nesting species. Climatic factors and the extent of human activities in the past, however, have led to widely differing conditions prevailing on the different islands. Christmas (which came to prominence as a post-war atomic testing-base), Fanning, and Washington, Islands have permanent settlements; the five southern Line Islands are totally uninhabited.

Wildlife generally is threatened by introduced animals, especially cats, and additionally on inhabited islands by environmental changes and the direct impact of human disturbance. A Wildlife Conservation Unit, set up in 1977, administers five reserves on Christmas Island and is responsible for the islands of Malden, Starbuck, and Vostok, which are wildlife sanctuaries. Wildlife laws give protection to the Green Turtle and to 31 resident and regularly-occurring migratory species of birds. Naturalist-orientated tours to the Line Islands constitute a key development project which provides some optimism for the future.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1980

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Bailey, E. (1977). The Christmas Island Story. Stacey International, London, UK: 88 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Bakus, G. J. (1967). Changes in the avifauna of Fanning Island, Central Pacific, between 1924 and 1963. Condor, 69, pp. 207–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, E. H. (1941) American Polynesia: Coral Islands of the Central Pacific. Tongg Publishing, Honolulu, Hawaii: 208 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Clapp, R. B. & Sibley, F. C. (1971 a). The vascular flora and terrestrial vertebrates of Vostok Island, South-central Pacific. Atoll Res. Bull, 144, pp. 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clapp, R. B. & Sibley, F. C. (1971 b). Notes on the vascular flora and terrestrial vertebrates of Caroline Atoll, Southern Line Islands. Atoll Res. Bull., 145, pp. 116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curry-Lindahl, K. (1980). Zoogeographic subrogions of the Pacific Realm as a background for terrestrial ecological reserves: Part I, General introduction and Northern and Western Pacific Regions. Environmental Conservation, 7 (1), pp. 6776, map.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dixon, W. A. (1877). Notes on the meteorology and natural history of a guano island. Roy. Soc. New South Wales Jour., 11, pp. 165–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forshaw, J. M. (1973). Parrots of the World. Lansdowne Press, Melbourne, Australia: 584 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Gordon, D. C. (1970). Birds observed at Fanning Island. In Report of the Fanning Island Expedition, January 1970. Hawaii Institute of Geophysics, 1, 203 pp. [ not available for checking].Google Scholar
Gould, P. J. (1974). Sooty Tern (Sterna fuscata). Pp. 652 in Pelagic Studies of Seabirds in the Central and Eastern Pacific Ocean (Ed. W. B. King). Smithsonian Cont. to Zool., 158, iv + 277 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Gould, P. J., King, W. B. & Sanger, G. A. (1974). Redtailed Tropicbird (Phaethon rubricauda). Pp. 206–31 in Pelagic Studies of Seabirds in the Central and Eastern Pacific Ocean (Ed. W. B. King). Smithsonian Cont. to Zool., 158, iv + 277 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Kirby, H. (1925). The birds of Fanning Island. Condor, 27, pp. 185–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SirPrice, A. Grenfell (1963). The Western Invasion of the Pacific and its Continents. Clarendon Press, Oxford, UK: viii + 236 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Schreiber, R. W. & Ashmole, N. P. (1970). Sea-bird breeding seasons on Christmas Island, Pacific Ocean. Ibis, 112, pp. 363–94.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sibley, F. C. & Clapp, R. B. (1967). Distribution and dispersal of Central Pacific Lesser Frigatebirds Fregata ariel. Ibis, 109, pp. 328–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
St John, H. & Fosberg, F. R. (1937). Vegetation of Flint Island, Central Pacific. Occ. Papers of the B. P. Bishop Museum, XII(24), pp. 14.Google Scholar
Streets, T. (1877). Some account of the natural history of the Fanning Group of Islands. Amer. Nat., 11(2), pp. 6572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar