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Pitcairn Islands

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Ducie Island - Pitcairn Islands
Ducie Island is an uninhabited island and atoll of the south Pacific Ocean, annexed to the Pitcairn Islands colony in 1902.
Ducie Island is located 335 statute miles (540 km) east of Pitcairn at 24°40′09″S, 124°47′11″W, and has an area of two and a half square miles (6 km²); it's one and a half miles (2.4 km) long, northeast to southwest, and about one mile (1.6 km) wide. Ducie Island's maximum elevation is about twelve feet (4 m) and the few trees there grow to about fourteen feet (4.3 m) at the most.
Ducie Island was discovered by Captain Edward Edwards in the Pandora while searching for the mutineers from the Bounty. It is named after Baron Francis Ducie, a captain in the Royal Navy.
The lagoon is deep and noted for its poisonous fish and extremely dangerous sharks, it is up to 12 m deep, characterised by a well-preserved death assemblage of a formerly prolific coral fauna, encrusted by a much sparser live coral assemblage.
Presumably the formerly abundant corals have been killed by influxes of cold water at this island which is towards the southern limit of coral growth.Ducie's remoteness is evident in the depauperate flora. Acadia is covered in a monospecific forest of Argusia argentea. A second woody species, Pemphis acidula, was recorded in 1991, and there are records from the 1922 Whitney Expedition of a grass and a vine. No other vascular plants are known. Ducie receives visits once or twice a year from cruise ships which land their passengers on the north shore of Acadia.
Ducie Island
 
Map of Ducie Island
 
Birdlife
Over 90 percent of the world's Murphy's Petrels nest on Ducie, making the atoll of supreme importance for this species. It is also important for two other surface-nesting Pterodroma petrels, the Herald and Kermadec. All three species may benefit from the 1997 eradication of Pacific rats, Rattus exulans. It is also possible that Henderson Petrels may begin to nest again on Ducie. However, Ducie's extreme remoteness probably precludes any monitoring of population recoveries.The fourth seabird species contributing to Ducie's status as an IBA is the Christmas Shearwater. Because of the species' sub-annual breeding cycle, the current population estimate, a minimum of 3000 pairs, is not especially reliable, but it makes Ducie one of the species' largest colonies, holding around five percent of the known world breeding population. Phoenix Petrels, considered globally Vulnerable, apparently disappeared from Ducie between the Whitney visit in 1922 and the 1991/1992 Expedition,The populations of Fairy Tern (5000 pairs) and Red-tailed Tropicbird (500-1000) are substantial. Other seabird species breed in lesser numbers.There are no landbirds on Ducie.
 
Conservation
The vegetation of Ducie could alter drastically, with consequences for birdlife, if certain plant species (e.g. Lantana camara) reached the island. Great care should taken to avoid the accidental or deliberate introduction of exotic species. For example, soil, seeds or seedlings should not be taken to Ducie. Visitors should be reminded of the need to take the greatest care not to carry seeds ashore on clothing, on footwear or in camera bags. This reminder should be given on Pitcairn if the visitors are planning to reach Ducie from the west or, with the co-operation of Chilean authorities, on Easter Island, if the visitors are coming from the east. Rats were eradicated from the island in 1997. The project with carried out by Wildlife Management International with funding from the British Department for International Development and the World Wide Fund for Nature (British Section). Logistic difficulties have precluded any monitoring of the impact of this on seabird nesting success or numbers.
The fact that Ducie is only rarely visited means the chance of re-introduction is low.Ducie appears to qualify for Ramsar status therefore its designation should be promoted after full consultation. Ramsar designation would recognize and help perpetuate Ducie's importance as a haven for birds and as a thriving example of biogeographic processes.
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