Fanjove Island Explained

Fanjove Island
Pushpin Map:Tanzania
Pushpin Relief:Yes
Pushpin Map Caption:Location on the Mafia Archipelago
Map Width:200
Location:Sea of Zanj
Archipelago:The Songosongo Archipelago
Area Km2:1
Length Km:1.0
Width Km:0.4
Ethnic Groups:Matumbi
Languages:Swahili
Country Admin Divisions Title:Region
Country Admin Divisions:Lindi Region
Country Admin Divisions Title 1:District
Country Admin Divisions 1:Kilwa District
Country Admin Divisions Title 2:Ward
Country Admin Divisions 2:Songosongo

Fanjove Island (Kisiwa cha Fanjove, in Swahili) is a coral island in the Songosongo Archipelago. The island is governed by the Songosongo ward in Kilwa District of Lindi Region in Tanzania's Indian ocean coast. The island is a geographically part of the Songosongo Islands archipelago which is composed of 22 reefs and 4 islands. The other three islands in the archipelago are Songo Songo, Nyuni Island and Okuza Island. [1] The is land is originally been uninhabited, thus it has been leased to a luxury hotelier by the Tanzanian government.[2] On January 12, 2000, 11 Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin that had become live-stranded on Fanjove Island were reported as having been refloated and released.[3]

Conservation

Sea Sense, a conservation group, visited Fanjove Island in Kilwa District after learning that multiple green turtle nests had been established there in 2010. There were numerous security guards on the island who had reported the nests; the island is currently being developed by a tour operator. However, a number of the nests they documented in 2010 had failed as a result of tide flooding. Sea Sense offered hands-on training courses to improve knowledge of nest identification, translocation procedures, post-hatching excavations, and hatching Codes of Conduct in order to increase the survival rates of future nests. Theoretical instruction in the biology and life history of sea turtles served as a support for this training. [4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About Fanjove.
  2. Web site: Fanjove Island.
  3. Fisher, David, and Nigel Hunter. "East African rarities committee report." Scopus: Journal of East African Ornithology 36.2 (2016): 55-64.
  4. West, Lindsey. "Community-based endangered marine species conservation in Tanzania." Sea Sense annual report 1 (2011): 1-40.