Monday, 5 November 2007

So where is Aride, and why is it so important?

The Seychelles’ islands of which there are 115, were created many millennia ago, when India broke away from Africa somewhere close to Madagascar, and drifted across the Indian Ocean, leaving the granite fragments of the Seychelles in its wake.

Aride is the northernmost island of the granitic Seychelles, roughly 68 hectares in area, approximately 1.6km long by 0.6km wide. However despite its small size, it is home to one of the most important seabirds populations in the Indian Ocean. It is the finest nature reserve of the granitic Seychelles and a conservationists’ paradise. Eighteen species of native birds (including five only found in Seychelles) breed on Aride, this is far more than on any other granitic island.

The island is leased and managed as a nature reserve by the Island conservation Society (ICS) of Seychelles, but owned by the Royal Society of Wildlife Trusts, a UK based charity since 1973. The whole island is been protected by Seychelles law as a nature reserve. Nature is the top priority, and the only human inhabitants are the reserve’s staff, currently four Seychellois rangers and two island wardens.

The Wildlife
Over 1.25 million seabirds regularly breed on Aride, including the world’s largest colony of lesser noddies, the worlds only hilltop colony of sooty terns and the Indian Oceans largest colony of roseate terns. The island hosts the world’s largest colony of Audubon’s shearwaters and what is thought to be the world’s largest colony of white-tailed tropic birds. There are also very large breeding numbers of brown noddies, fairy terns, wedge-tailed shearwaters and a few pairs of red-tailed tropic birds.

There has been several successful translocations of endangered or restricted-range endemic bird species onto Aride, these include the Seychelles warbler, Seychelles Fody and the Seychelles magpie robin. The Seychelles blue pigeon and the Seychelles sunbird have re-colonised Aride naturally.

Aride has the world’s highest density of lizards, with other reptiles such as skinks, geckos and harmless snakes. Two species of marine turtles regularly nest on the beaches, the green and hawksbill turtles.

The reserve boundary includes 200m of surrounding seas, including a beautiful coral reef, with over 450 species of fish, from whale sharks to flying fish!!

2 comments:

Trish said...

Hi Sal and Melv
Love the photos and info to date. How was the journey over? Introduced a new member last weekend at the vols conference - my friend from Yorkshire, Tina, was visiting and was with me by default, and signed up as flexi with Fran. We visited GKL, WSR and saw the starlings at Ham Wall as well, all in just 2 days. Look forward to seeing how you are getting on. Just coming on to rain and temperatures dropping. Brrr! Take care and all the best. Trish

Godney Aquaponics said...

Hi Trish,

Thanks for your comment, great to hear from you. We are getting on fine - it is fantastic - the internet connection rather slow though!!

The island's wildlife is better than we had ever imagined!! We have been counting and recording turtles almost everyday, just one of the highlights.

It is scorching hot and it is shorts all day every day - quite a few bitting insects to get used to though!!

Must go

Keep in touch,

Love to all

Sal & Melv