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Revillagigedo Islands

The Revillagigedo Islands (Spanish: Islas Revillagigedo, IPA: [reˈβiʝa xiˈxeðo]) or Revillagigedo Archipelago are a group of four volcanic islands in the Pacific Ocean, known for their unique ecosystem. They lie approximately 458 kilometres (285 mi) from Socorro Island south and southwest of Cabo San Lucas, the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula, and 698 to 1,092 kilometres (434 to 679 mi) west of Manzanillo. Historically linked to the Mexican state of Colima, to which they were granted in 1861 to establish a penal colony, the islands are under Mexican federal property and jurisdiction.[2][3]

Revillagigedo Islands
Native name:
Islas Revillagigedo
Geography
LocationPacific Ocean
Coordinates18°50′N 112°50′W / 18.833°N 112.833°W / 18.833; -112.833Coordinates: 18°50′N 112°50′W / 18.833°N 112.833°W / 18.833; -112.833
Total islands4
Area157.81 km2 (60.93 sq mi)
Highest elevation1,130 m (3710 ft)
Highest pointCerro Evermann
StateColima
Demographics
Population54
Additional information
Time zone
Official nameArchipiélago de Revillagigedo
TypeNatural
Criteriavii, ix, x
Designated2016 (40th session)
Reference no.1510
RegionLatin America and the Caribbean
Official nameReserva de la Biosfera Archipiélago de Revillagigedo
Designated2 February 2004
Reference no.1357[1]

In July 2016, the Revillagigedo Archipelago was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site,[4] and in November 2017 they were declared to be a marine reserve and a national park of Mexico.[5] Some of the volcanoes are active, with the last eruption of Volcán Bárcena in 1953, and Socorro in 1993. Travelling to the islands from their nearest land point takes approximately 26 to 30 hours, as they are typically reached by sea; a small military airstrip exists on Socorro.[6]

Geography

 
Montículo Cinerítico (front) and Bárcena (behind), volcanic cones on San Benedicto, one of the Revillagigedo Islands.
Bárcena has existed only since 1952.

The total area is 157.81 km2 (60.93 mi2), spread over an east-to-west extent of about 420 km (261 mi). A naval station in the south of Socorro Island has a population of 45 (staff). On Clarión is a small naval garrison with nine men. The islands are otherwise uninhabited. The islands are named after Don Juan Vicente de Güemes, 2nd Count of Revillagigedo, the 53rd viceroy of New Spain.[citation needed]

Island (alternate name) Length by
width (km)
Area (km2) Highest peak (m)
Inner islands (UTC-7, Mountain Time Zone)
San Benedicto 4.315 by 2.490 5.94 Bárcena (310)
Socorro (San Tomás) 16.813 by 15.629 132.06 Mount (Cerro) Evermann (1130)
Roca Partida 0.246 by 0.073 0.014 (34)
Outer island (UTC-8, Pacific Time Zone)
Clarión (Santa Rosa) 8.544 by 3.686 19.80 Monte Gallegos (335)
Revillagigedo Islands 420 by 115 157.81 Mount (Cerro) Evermann (1130)

The three eastern islands are called the inner islands. They fall in the time zone UTC-7 (Mountain Time), while the major part of Colima is UTC-6 (Central Time Zone). Clarión is comparatively far to the west, by more than 200 km in comparison with the inner islands, and in UTC-8 (Pacific Time Zone). The Revillagigedo Islands are one of three Mexican island groups in the Pacific Ocean that are not on the continental shelf; the others are Guadalupe Island and Rocas Alijos.

History

Sixteenth to nineteenth century

 
Location of Socorro Island and the rest of the Revillagigedo Archipelago, and extent of Mexico's western EEZ in the Pacific

No evidence of human habitation on any of the islands exists before their discovery by Spanish explorers. Hernando de Grijalva and his crew discovered an uninhabited island on 19 December 1533, and named it Santo Tomás (Socorro Island) and on 28 December they discovered Isla de los Inocentes (San Benedicto) which owed its name to having been found on the day of the Holy Innocents.[7][8]

In November 1542, Ruy López de Villalobos, while exploring new routes across the Pacific, rediscovered Inocentes and Santo Tomás and charted the latter as Anublada ("Cloudy"). Villalobos was the first to report sighting of Roca Partida Island giving it its present-day name. In 1608, Martín Yánez de Armida, in charge of another expedition, visited Anublada and changed its name to Socorro. In 1779 José Camacho was the first to report sighting of the island remaining, that he charted as Santa Rosa ("Saint Rose"). Santa Rosa was later renamed Clarion after the vessel commanded by Henry Gyzelaar at that time.

The Revillagigedo Islands have been visited by a number of other explorers: Domingo del Castillo (1541), Miguel Pinto (1772), Alexander von Humboldt (1811), Benjamin Morrell (1825), Sir Edward Belcher (1839) who made the first botanical collections and Reeve, who witnessed the eruption of Mount Evermann in 1848.[9] On 25 July 1861, President Benito Juárez signed a decree awarding territorial control over the four islands to the state of Colima. His plan was to build an offshore penitentiary on Isla Socorro; although this never happened, the decree whereby they were attached to Colima has never been repealed. In 1865, the island was explored by ornithologist Andrew Jackson Grayson, who discovered the Socorro dove, Socorro mockingbird and the Socorro elf owl which were later given scientific names in his honor.[10]

Twentieth century

 
Socorro and Bárcena on San Benedicto are indicated on this map of Mexican volcanoes

At the beginning of the twentieth century, Dr. Barton Warren Evermann, director of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, California, promoted the scientific exploration of the islands. The most comprehensive biological collections were obtained at this time. The volcano on Isla Socorro was renamed in his honor. In 1957 the Mexican Navy established a naval base on Socorro and has had a permanent presence on the island since then. A tiny outpost also exists on Clarión, as noted above. On 21 March 1972, Pablo Silva García became the first Governor of Colima to visit his state's island territories. A plaque was unveiled to mark the event and cement Colima's claim.

The seas surrounding the larger islands are popular with scuba divers; a variety of marine life such as cetaceans, sharks and manta rays can be observed. Visitors usually stay aboard expedition vessels during their visit to the islands, which is desirable from an ecological standpoint to prevent introduction of further invasive species. The islands are considered dangerous to visit for purposes beyond diving since it is difficult to make a landing; some have nearly lost their lives attempting to do so on Clarion for example.[11]

They are occasionally visited by amateur radio operators, who usually use the ITU prefix XF4. Because of their distance from the mainland, for award credit they are considered to be an "entity" separate from Mexico. Expeditions from organizations engaged in biological conservation of the islands visit the islands for fieldwork on a regular basis. No tourism facilities exist; the islands have no reliable sources of fresh water of their own.[12]

Twenty-first century

On 24 November 2017, President of Mexico Enrique Peña Nieto created North America's largest marine protected area around the Revillagigedo Islands. This protected area covers 57,000 square miles or 150,000 square kilometers around the islands, and bans fishing, mining, and tourism development in the protected area and on the islands.[5]

Ecology

The Revillagigedo Islands are home to many endemic plant and animal species, and are sometimes called Mexico's "little Hawaii". They are recognized as a distinct terrestrial ecoregion, part of the Neotropical realm. Socorro is the most diverse in flora, fauna, and topography. The Mexican Government established the islands as a Biosphere Reserve on June 4, 1994. Oceanographic Magazine stated in 2020 that, "Its remoteness, protection and peculiar oceanography makes it one of the most biodiverse and exciting marine destinations on earth."[13]

 
Socorro as seen from space. North is to the upper left corner.

According to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF),[14] 14 of the islands' 16 generally accepted resident taxa of landbirds[15] as well as one seabird are endemic, as are all of the islands' native terrestrial vertebrates. The latter, however, consist only of a whip snake (Masticophis anthonyi), a night snake (Hypsiglena unaocularis) and two Urosaurus iguanids (U. auriculatus and U. clarionensis). Numerous seabird taxa breed no further north(east)wards than San Benedicto; storm-petrels are notably absent as breeders though they breed in the region and visit the islands to forage. Albatrosses are also not normally found here. Among landbirds, the absence of the house finch, widespread on northeastern Pacific offshore islands, is the most conspicuous one.[12]

Apart from the native birds, migrant shorebirds and others are often found on the islands. Bahia Azufre (Sulfur Bay) on Clarión seems to be a favorite stopover location, as it is one of the few longer stretches of beach in the islands; mostly, the shoreline is steep cliffs.[12] The archipelago is also a part of wintering grounds for humpback whales in the North Pacific.[16]

Socorro has numerous endemic plant taxa, whereas Clarión has only a few. The San Benedicto ecosystem was nearly wiped out in the devastating eruption of Bárcena volcano on August 1, 1952. The ecosystem there has since recovered, but the event is known to have caused the extinction of the San Benedicto rock wren.[12] Most if not all native plants found on San Benedicto today are shared with Clarión, but not with the closer Socorro to the south, due to the prevailing winds and ocean currents. The native flora of Clarión is about equally shared with both other large islands.[17]

As opposed to the interchange between the islands, the animals and plants that colonized them initially are apparently all from mainland populations generally to the northeastward of the Revillagigedos. Plants are most often derived from Baja California founder populations, whereas the endemic nonavian reptiles seem to be rather derived directly from mainland populations of the Sonora-Sinaloa area. The ancestors of the islands' terrestrial birds probably came from the general area of southern North and northern Central America. As illustrated by the fact that no endemic landbird taxon occurs on more than one island and the cases of the Socorro and Clarión wrens as well as the Socorro dove and Clarión mourning dove, each bird population seems to have arisen independently.[12] The archipelago has been recognised as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International for its breeding seabirds and endemic landbirds.[18]

Threats and conservation

 
The Socorro dove (Zenaida graysoni), as of 2019, survives only in captivity

As late as 1956, it was said that:

"The future of the avifauna of the islands appears to be secure at present. There are no human inhabitants, and no mammals of any kind except the moderate and apparently stable population of sheep on Socorro."[12]

But the unique ecology of the islands has since then come under threat from introduced species. The sheep were introduced to Socorro in 1869. Cats became established after 1953, probably in the early 1970s.[12][19] Pigs were introduced to Clarión in 1979, and rabbits became feral at some earlier date.[20]

Several endemic species of Socorro are now threatened with extinction. The Socorro mockingbird (Mimodes graysoni) numbers less than 400 individuals altogether. The endemic Socorro parakeet (Aratinga brevipes) and Townsend's shearwater (Puffinus auricularis), are also endangered. The Socorro dove (Zenaida graysoni) is now extinct in the wild, but is being bred in captivity. The elf owl's Socorro subspecies Micrathene whitneyi graysoni appears to be extinct.[21] Other plant and animal taxa in the archipelago are also considered threatened or nearly so.[20]

A number of conservation initiatives are dedicated to halting the destruction of the native ecosystems of the islands. Dr. Harmunt Walter of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and Dr. Luis F. Baptista of the California Academy of Sciences have coordinated breeding and reintroduction efforts for the Socorro dove since 1988, through the Island Endemics Institute. The Comité Científico para la Conservación y Restauración del Archipiélago Revillagigedo ("Scientific Committee for the Conservation and Restoration of the Revillagigedo Islands") was founded in 1996, and is a committee representing several organizations, including the Island Conservation & Ecology Group, Island Endemics Institute, the University of Missouri–St. Louis (UMSL), the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and others. It is chaired by Dr. Walter and Dr. Luis Medrano of UNAM is its secretary. The committee has been advocating removal of the exotic species from the islands, especially the estimated 2000 sheep on Socorro, to allow the islands' ecology to recover, and adoption of a management plan to promote the recovery of the islands' native species, including reintroduction of the Socorro dove.

Brattstrom and Howell who gave the optimistic outlook in 1956 went on to caution:

"it may be hoped that the Mexican government will guard against the introduction of mammals such as rabbits, cats, goats and others that have invariably brought disaster to the flora and fauna of insular regions."[12]

On 25 November 2017, President of Mexico Enrique Peña Nieto acted to protect the biodiversity of the region by creating North America's largest marine protected area around the islands, and prohibiting mining, fishing, and tourism development on or near the islands.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Reserva de la Biosfera Archipiélago de Revillagigedo". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Programa de Conservación y Manejo Reserva de la Biosfera Archipielago de Revillagigedo" (PDF). Comisión Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  3. ^ "ACUERDO por el que se da a conocer el resumen del Programa de Manejo del Área Natural Protegida con la categoría de Parque Nacional Revillagigedo". Diario Oficial de la Federación. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  4. ^ "Archipiélago de Revillagigedo". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  5. ^ a b c Busby, Mattha (25 November 2017). "Mexico creates vast new ocean reserve to protect 'Galapagos of North America'". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 November 2017.
  6. ^ "Exploring Mexico's Revillagigedo Islands - Dive Training Magazine".
  7. ^ Brand, Donald D. (1967). Friis, Herman R. (ed.). The Pacific Basin. A History of its Geographical Exploration. New York: American Geographical Society. p. 370.
  8. ^ American Geographical Society of New York (1967), Special publication, issue 38, p. 370, American Geographical Society, ISSN 0065-843X
  9. ^ Geological Survey (U.S.) U.S. Geological Survey professional paper, issue 492–493, p. 281, ISSN 1044-9620
  10. ^ Mike Parr. (PDF). Socorro Island:Fire and Brimstone in the Mexican Pacific. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 20 March 2011.
  11. ^ Collecting Evolution: The Galapagos Expedition that Vindicated Darwin. Oxford University Press. March 2017. ISBN 978-0-19-935462-7.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Brattstrom, Bayard H. & Howell, Thomas R. (1956). "The Birds of the Revilla Gigedo Islands, Mexico" (PDF). Condor. 58 (2): 107–120. doi:10.2307/1364977. JSTOR 1364977.
  13. ^ "Unknown territories: Exploring the Revillagigedo Islands".
  14. ^ "Islas Revillagigedo dry forests". Terrestrial Ecoregions. World Wildlife Fund.
  15. ^ Including one waterbird, the local yellow-crowned night heron subspecies.
  16. ^ Urban J., Jaramillo A.L., Aguayo A., Baker S.C., 2000, Migratory destinations of humpback whales wintering in the Mexican Pacific, Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 2(2), pp.101–110, Retrieved on January 29, 2017
  17. ^ California/Mexico Island Conservation Database (2007): Plant accounts 2007-12-08 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2007-NOV-24.
  18. ^ "Islas Revillagigedo". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  19. ^ BirdLife International (2007): Socorro Dove – BirdLife Species Factsheet. Retrieved 2007-NOV-24.
  20. ^ a b International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (2007): 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN, Gland.
  21. ^ Weick, Friedhelm (2006), Owls (Strigiformes): annotated and illustrated checklist, Springer, p. 187, ISBN 3-540-35234-1

External links

  • World Wildlife Fund, ed. (2001). . WildWorld Ecoregion Profile. National Geographic Society. Archived from the original on 2010-03-08.
  • "Islas Revillagigedo dry forests". Terrestrial Ecoregions. World Wildlife Fund.
  • Contemporary report of José Camacho's sighting of Roca Partida and Clarion

revillagigedo, islands, island, alaska, revillagigedo, island, spanish, islas, revillagigedo, reˈβiʝa, xiˈxeðo, revillagigedo, archipelago, group, four, volcanic, islands, pacific, ocean, known, their, unique, ecosystem, they, approximately, kilometres, from, . For the island in Alaska see Revillagigedo Island The Revillagigedo Islands Spanish Islas Revillagigedo IPA reˈbiʝa xiˈxedo or Revillagigedo Archipelago are a group of four volcanic islands in the Pacific Ocean known for their unique ecosystem They lie approximately 458 kilometres 285 mi from Socorro Island south and southwest of Cabo San Lucas the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula and 698 to 1 092 kilometres 434 to 679 mi west of Manzanillo Historically linked to the Mexican state of Colima to which they were granted in 1861 to establish a penal colony the islands are under Mexican federal property and jurisdiction 2 3 Revillagigedo IslandsNative name Islas RevillagigedoGeographyLocationPacific OceanCoordinates18 50 N 112 50 W 18 833 N 112 833 W 18 833 112 833 Coordinates 18 50 N 112 50 W 18 833 N 112 833 W 18 833 112 833Total islands4Area157 81 km2 60 93 sq mi Highest elevation1 130 m 3710 ft Highest pointCerro EvermannStateColimaDemographicsPopulation54Additional informationTime zoneMountain Time Zone UTC 7 Pacific Time Zone UTC 8 UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameArchipielago de RevillagigedoTypeNaturalCriteriavii ix xDesignated2016 40th session Reference no 1510RegionLatin America and the CaribbeanRamsar WetlandOfficial nameReserva de la Biosfera Archipielago de RevillagigedoDesignated2 February 2004Reference no 1357 1 In July 2016 the Revillagigedo Archipelago was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site 4 and in November 2017 they were declared to be a marine reserve and a national park of Mexico 5 Some of the volcanoes are active with the last eruption of Volcan Barcena in 1953 and Socorro in 1993 Travelling to the islands from their nearest land point takes approximately 26 to 30 hours as they are typically reached by sea a small military airstrip exists on Socorro 6 Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 Sixteenth to nineteenth century 2 2 Twentieth century 2 3 Twenty first century 3 Ecology 3 1 Threats and conservation 4 References 5 External linksGeography Edit Monticulo Cineritico front and Barcena behind volcanic cones on San Benedicto one of the Revillagigedo Islands Barcena has existed only since 1952 The total area is 157 81 km2 60 93 mi2 spread over an east to west extent of about 420 km 261 mi A naval station in the south of Socorro Island has a population of 45 staff On Clarion is a small naval garrison with nine men The islands are otherwise uninhabited The islands are named after Don Juan Vicente de Guemes 2nd Count of Revillagigedo the 53rd viceroy of New Spain citation needed Island alternate name Length bywidth km Area km2 Highest peak m Inner islands UTC 7 Mountain Time Zone San Benedicto 4 315 by 2 490 5 94 Barcena 310 Socorro San Tomas 16 813 by 15 629 132 06 Mount Cerro Evermann 1130 Roca Partida 0 246 by 0 073 0 014 34 Outer island UTC 8 Pacific Time Zone Clarion Santa Rosa 8 544 by 3 686 19 80 Monte Gallegos 335 Revillagigedo Islands 420 by 115 157 81 Mount Cerro Evermann 1130 The three eastern islands are called the inner islands They fall in the time zone UTC 7 Mountain Time while the major part of Colima is UTC 6 Central Time Zone Clarion is comparatively far to the west by more than 200 km in comparison with the inner islands and in UTC 8 Pacific Time Zone The Revillagigedo Islands are one of three Mexican island groups in the Pacific Ocean that are not on the continental shelf the others are Guadalupe Island and Rocas Alijos History EditSixteenth to nineteenth century Edit Location of Socorro Island and the rest of the Revillagigedo Archipelago and extent of Mexico s western EEZ in the Pacific No evidence of human habitation on any of the islands exists before their discovery by Spanish explorers Hernando de Grijalva and his crew discovered an uninhabited island on 19 December 1533 and named it Santo Tomas Socorro Island and on 28 December they discovered Isla de los Inocentes San Benedicto which owed its name to having been found on the day of the Holy Innocents 7 8 In November 1542 Ruy Lopez de Villalobos while exploring new routes across the Pacific rediscovered Inocentes and Santo Tomas and charted the latter as Anublada Cloudy Villalobos was the first to report sighting of Roca Partida Island giving it its present day name In 1608 Martin Yanez de Armida in charge of another expedition visited Anublada and changed its name to Socorro In 1779 Jose Camacho was the first to report sighting of the island remaining that he charted as Santa Rosa Saint Rose Santa Rosa was later renamed Clarion after the vessel commanded by Henry Gyzelaar at that time The Revillagigedo Islands have been visited by a number of other explorers Domingo del Castillo 1541 Miguel Pinto 1772 Alexander von Humboldt 1811 Benjamin Morrell 1825 Sir Edward Belcher 1839 who made the first botanical collections and Reeve who witnessed the eruption of Mount Evermann in 1848 9 On 25 July 1861 President Benito Juarez signed a decree awarding territorial control over the four islands to the state of Colima His plan was to build an offshore penitentiary on Isla Socorro although this never happened the decree whereby they were attached to Colima has never been repealed In 1865 the island was explored by ornithologist Andrew Jackson Grayson who discovered the Socorro dove Socorro mockingbird and the Socorro elf owl which were later given scientific names in his honor 10 Twentieth century Edit Socorro and Barcena on San Benedicto are indicated on this map of Mexican volcanoes At the beginning of the twentieth century Dr Barton Warren Evermann director of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco California promoted the scientific exploration of the islands The most comprehensive biological collections were obtained at this time The volcano on Isla Socorro was renamed in his honor In 1957 the Mexican Navy established a naval base on Socorro and has had a permanent presence on the island since then A tiny outpost also exists on Clarion as noted above On 21 March 1972 Pablo Silva Garcia became the first Governor of Colima to visit his state s island territories A plaque was unveiled to mark the event and cement Colima s claim The seas surrounding the larger islands are popular with scuba divers a variety of marine life such as cetaceans sharks and manta rays can be observed Visitors usually stay aboard expedition vessels during their visit to the islands which is desirable from an ecological standpoint to prevent introduction of further invasive species The islands are considered dangerous to visit for purposes beyond diving since it is difficult to make a landing some have nearly lost their lives attempting to do so on Clarion for example 11 They are occasionally visited by amateur radio operators who usually use the ITU prefix XF4 Because of their distance from the mainland for award credit they are considered to be an entity separate from Mexico Expeditions from organizations engaged in biological conservation of the islands visit the islands for fieldwork on a regular basis No tourism facilities exist the islands have no reliable sources of fresh water of their own 12 Twenty first century Edit On 24 November 2017 President of Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto created North America s largest marine protected area around the Revillagigedo Islands This protected area covers 57 000 square miles or 150 000 square kilometers around the islands and bans fishing mining and tourism development in the protected area and on the islands 5 Ecology EditThe Revillagigedo Islands are home to many endemic plant and animal species and are sometimes called Mexico s little Hawaii They are recognized as a distinct terrestrial ecoregion part of the Neotropical realm Socorro is the most diverse in flora fauna and topography The Mexican Government established the islands as a Biosphere Reserve on June 4 1994 Oceanographic Magazine stated in 2020 that Its remoteness protection and peculiar oceanography makes it one of the most biodiverse and exciting marine destinations on earth 13 Socorro as seen from space North is to the upper left corner According to the World Wide Fund for Nature WWF 14 14 of the islands 16 generally accepted resident taxa of landbirds 15 as well as one seabird are endemic as are all of the islands native terrestrial vertebrates The latter however consist only of a whip snake Masticophis anthonyi a night snake Hypsiglena unaocularis and two Urosaurus iguanids U auriculatus and U clarionensis Numerous seabird taxa breed no further north east wards than San Benedicto storm petrels are notably absent as breeders though they breed in the region and visit the islands to forage Albatrosses are also not normally found here Among landbirds the absence of the house finch widespread on northeastern Pacific offshore islands is the most conspicuous one 12 Apart from the native birds migrant shorebirds and others are often found on the islands Bahia Azufre Sulfur Bay on Clarion seems to be a favorite stopover location as it is one of the few longer stretches of beach in the islands mostly the shoreline is steep cliffs 12 The archipelago is also a part of wintering grounds for humpback whales in the North Pacific 16 Socorro has numerous endemic plant taxa whereas Clarion has only a few The San Benedicto ecosystem was nearly wiped out in the devastating eruption of Barcena volcano on August 1 1952 The ecosystem there has since recovered but the event is known to have caused the extinction of the San Benedicto rock wren 12 Most if not all native plants found on San Benedicto today are shared with Clarion but not with the closer Socorro to the south due to the prevailing winds and ocean currents The native flora of Clarion is about equally shared with both other large islands 17 As opposed to the interchange between the islands the animals and plants that colonized them initially are apparently all from mainland populations generally to the northeastward of the Revillagigedos Plants are most often derived from Baja California founder populations whereas the endemic nonavian reptiles seem to be rather derived directly from mainland populations of the Sonora Sinaloa area The ancestors of the islands terrestrial birds probably came from the general area of southern North and northern Central America As illustrated by the fact that no endemic landbird taxon occurs on more than one island and the cases of the Socorro and Clarion wrens as well as the Socorro dove and Clarion mourning dove each bird population seems to have arisen independently 12 The archipelago has been recognised as an Important Bird Area IBA by BirdLife International for its breeding seabirds and endemic landbirds 18 Threats and conservation Edit The Socorro dove Zenaida graysoni as of 2019 survives only in captivity As late as 1956 it was said that The future of the avifauna of the islands appears to be secure at present There are no human inhabitants and no mammals of any kind except the moderate and apparently stable population of sheep on Socorro 12 But the unique ecology of the islands has since then come under threat from introduced species The sheep were introduced to Socorro in 1869 Cats became established after 1953 probably in the early 1970s 12 19 Pigs were introduced to Clarion in 1979 and rabbits became feral at some earlier date 20 Several endemic species of Socorro are now threatened with extinction The Socorro mockingbird Mimodes graysoni numbers less than 400 individuals altogether The endemic Socorro parakeet Aratinga brevipes and Townsend s shearwater Puffinus auricularis are also endangered The Socorro dove Zenaida graysoni is now extinct in the wild but is being bred in captivity The elf owl s Socorro subspecies Micrathene whitneyi graysoni appears to be extinct 21 Other plant and animal taxa in the archipelago are also considered threatened or nearly so 20 A number of conservation initiatives are dedicated to halting the destruction of the native ecosystems of the islands Dr Harmunt Walter of the University of California Los Angeles UCLA and Dr Luis F Baptista of the California Academy of Sciences have coordinated breeding and reintroduction efforts for the Socorro dove since 1988 through the Island Endemics Institute The Comite Cientifico para la Conservacion y Restauracion del Archipielago Revillagigedo Scientific Committee for the Conservation and Restoration of the Revillagigedo Islands was founded in 1996 and is a committee representing several organizations including the Island Conservation amp Ecology Group Island Endemics Institute the University of Missouri St Louis UMSL the National Autonomous University of Mexico UNAM and others It is chaired by Dr Walter and Dr Luis Medrano of UNAM is its secretary The committee has been advocating removal of the exotic species from the islands especially the estimated 2000 sheep on Socorro to allow the islands ecology to recover and adoption of a management plan to promote the recovery of the islands native species including reintroduction of the Socorro dove Brattstrom and Howell who gave the optimistic outlook in 1956 went on to caution it may be hoped that the Mexican government will guard against the introduction of mammals such as rabbits cats goats and others that have invariably brought disaster to the flora and fauna of insular regions 12 On 25 November 2017 President of Mexico Enrique Pena Nieto acted to protect the biodiversity of the region by creating North America s largest marine protected area around the islands and prohibiting mining fishing and tourism development on or near the islands 5 References Edit Reserva de la Biosfera Archipielago de Revillagigedo Ramsar Sites Information Service Retrieved 25 April 2018 Programa de Conservacion y Manejo Reserva de la Biosfera Archipielago de Revillagigedo PDF Comision Nacional de Areas Naturales Protegidas Retrieved October 31 2021 ACUERDO por el que se da a conocer el resumen del Programa de Manejo del Area Natural Protegida con la categoria de Parque Nacional Revillagigedo Diario Oficial de la Federacion Retrieved October 31 2021 Archipielago de Revillagigedo UNESCO World Heritage Centre United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 19 July 2016 a b c Busby Mattha 25 November 2017 Mexico creates vast new ocean reserve to protect Galapagos of North America The Guardian Retrieved 26 November 2017 Exploring Mexico s Revillagigedo Islands Dive Training Magazine Brand Donald D 1967 Friis Herman R ed The Pacific Basin A History of its Geographical Exploration New York American Geographical Society p 370 American Geographical Society of New York 1967 Special publication issue 38 p 370 American Geographical Society ISSN 0065 843X Geological Survey U S U S Geological Survey professional paper issue 492 493 p 281 ISSN 1044 9620 Mike Parr ABC Report PDF Socorro Island Fire and Brimstone in the Mexican Pacific Archived from the original PDF on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 20 March 2011 Collecting Evolution The Galapagos Expedition that Vindicated Darwin Oxford University Press March 2017 ISBN 978 0 19 935462 7 a b c d e f g h Brattstrom Bayard H amp Howell Thomas R 1956 The Birds of the Revilla Gigedo Islands Mexico PDF Condor 58 2 107 120 doi 10 2307 1364977 JSTOR 1364977 Unknown territories Exploring the Revillagigedo Islands Islas Revillagigedo dry forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Including one waterbird the local yellow crowned night heron subspecies Urban J Jaramillo A L Aguayo A Baker S C 2000 Migratory destinations of humpback whales wintering in the Mexican Pacific Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 2 2 pp 101 110 Retrieved on January 29 2017 California Mexico Island Conservation Database 2007 Plant accounts Archived 2007 12 08 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2007 NOV 24 Islas Revillagigedo BirdLife Data Zone BirdLife International 2021 Retrieved 24 January 2021 BirdLife International 2007 Socorro Dove BirdLife Species Factsheet Retrieved 2007 NOV 24 a b International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources 2007 2007 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species IUCN Gland Weick Friedhelm 2006 Owls Strigiformes annotated and illustrated checklist Springer p 187 ISBN 3 540 35234 1External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Revillagigedo Islands World Wildlife Fund ed 2001 Islas Revillagigedo dry forests WildWorld Ecoregion Profile National Geographic Society Archived from the original on 2010 03 08 Islas Revillagigedo dry forests Terrestrial Ecoregions World Wildlife Fund Contemporary report of Jose Camacho s sighting of Roca Partida and Clarion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Revillagigedo Islands amp oldid 1145549614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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