Malpelo Island | |
Native Name: | Isla de Malpelo |
Native Name Link: | Spanish language |
Location: | Pacific Ocean |
Pushpin Map: | Colombia#Pacific Ocean |
Pushpin Relief: | yes |
Area Km2: | 1.2 |
Length Km: | 1.643 |
Width Km: | 0.727 |
Highest Mount: | Cerro La Mona |
Elevation M: | 360 |
Country Admin Divisions Title: | Department |
Country Admin Divisions: | Valle del Cauca |
Country Admin Divisions Title 1: | Municipality |
Country Admin Divisions 1: | Buenaventura |
Population: | Uninhabited |
Malpelo is a small oceanic island in the eastern Pacific Ocean, located about 500km (300miles) west of the Colombian mainland with a military post manned by the Colombian Armed Forces. It consists of a sheer and barren rock with three high peaks, the highest being the 300m (1,000feet) Cerro de la Mona. The island is about 1.50NaN0 in length from northeast to southwest, and 700order=flipNaNorder=flip across at its widest.
Malpelo is the only island that rises above the surface from the Malpelo Ridge, which is a solitary volcanic submarine ridge that extends in a northeast-southwest direction for 300km (200miles) and has a width of 100km (100miles). This island is surrounded by a number of offshore rocks. Off the northeast corner are the Tres Mosqueteros. Off the southwest corner are Salomón, Saúl, La Gringa, and Escuba. All the rocks are surrounded by deep water, and most of the face of the main island is very steep. Soundings between 1000and are obtainable within a few kilometres of the shore and the currents are strong and changeable. As an oceanic island, it has never been connected with any other islands or the mainland.[1] [2] [3]
Malpelo Island is composed of Miocene pillow lavas, volcanic breccias, and basaltic dikes that have been dated as being 16 to 17 million years old. This island and the underlying and underwater Malpelo Ridge were created along with the Carnegie Ridge in the Late Miocene by a very complex interaction between the Cocos-Nazca Spreading Centre and the Galápagos hotspot.[1] [3] [4]
Malpelo Island was presumably isolated from human contact prior to European discovery. It is uninhabited, and is located in the same area as other oceanic eastern Pacific islands, such as Cocos Island, Galápagos and the Revillagigedo Islands, which were all uninhabited at the time of European discovery, and possibly throughout their entire history prior to that.[5]
The exact date of Malpelo's discovery is unclear, although it may have been the first of the remote eastern Pacific islands to have been discovered by Europeans, as it appears on Peruvian maps from as early as 1530. Malpelo became a possession of Spain following its discovery, and was subsequently annexed by Peru, and later Colombia.[6]
At first glance, the island seems to be barren rock, devoid of all vegetation, but deposits of bird guano have helped colonies of algae, lichens, mosses, and some shrubs and ferns establish, all of which glean nutrients from the guano. Lizards are the only non-avian vertebrates on the island, with three species total.
It is also home to a unique species of land crabs, Johngarthia malpilensis, first described in 1893.[10]
The island has been recognised as an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because it supports a breeding population of some 60,000–110,000 Nazca boobies, as estimated in 2007.[11]
Malpelo is home of a unique shark population; swarms of 500 hammerhead sharks and hundreds of silky sharks are frequently seen by diving expeditions, making it a very popular shark-diving location. It is one of the few places where the smalltooth sand tiger has been seen alive; it is frequently spotted at the dive site "El bajo del Monstruo".[12] Acanthemblemaria stephensi, the Malpelo barnacle blenny, is a species of chaenopsid blenny found in coral reefs around Malpelo. The largest no-fishing zone in the East Pacific, measuring over 850,000 hectares, surrounds the island.[13]
The Malpelo Nature Reserve, a plant and wildlife sanctuary, covering 857500ha centered at 4.0033°N -81.6076°W. A Colombian foundation[14] is trying to preserve the biodiversity of the site. On July 12, 2006, Malpelo was declared by UNESCO as a natural World Heritage Site because of its status as an important shark reserve.