Sea Lion Island Explained

Sea Lion Island
Type:Island
Native Name:Isla de los Leones Marinos
Native Name Lang:es
Pushpin Map:Falkland Islands
Pushpin Map Caption:Sea Lion Island shown within the Falkland Islands
Coordinates:-52.4333°N -64°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Falkland Islands
Subdivision Type1:Island group
Seat Type:Main settlement
Seat:Sea Lion Island Settlement
Area Total Km2:9.05
Elevation Max M:46
Elevation Max Footnotes:
(Bull Hill)[1]
Population As Of:2001
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone1:FKST
Utc Offset1:−3
Footnotes:If shown, area and population ranks are for all islands and all inhabited islands in the Falklands respectively.

Sea Lion Island (Spanish; Castilian: Isla de los Leones Marinos) is the largest of the Sea Lion Island Group of the Falkland Islands. It is 90NaN0 in area.[1] and lies 140NaN0 southeast of Lafonia (East Falkland). It was designated a Ramsar site on 24 September 2001,[2] and as an Important Bird Area (BirdLife International 2006). In 2017 the island was designated as a National Nature Reserve.

Description

Sea Lion Island is 7.8km (04.8miles) long from east to west and 2.3km (01.4miles) wide, with 30m (100feet) cliffs at the south-western point and sandy bays to the east. The highest point at 46m (151feet) is Bull Hill.[1] East Loafers is the name of the bay on the southern shore. It also has a few ponds, including Beaver and Long Pond. Just to the south is Rum Island, a small seal colony. Other small members of the group are Brandy and Whisky Islands. The geology is mainly sandstone and mudstone, from about 250 million years ago. Some minor fossils have been found.

History

Sea Lion Island is the southernmost inhabited island of the Falkland Islands. Only formerly inhabited Beauchene Island is located further south. Sea Lion Island Settlement is the southernmost settlement of the Falkland Islands. The island has an airstrip. Historically, Sea Lion Island was a sheep farm. When the British ship Viscount was wrecked in 1892, the wreckage was used to build the farmhouse.[1]

The island was managed as a sheep farm for almost all of the 20th century, but in 1997 all but a small flock of sheep was removed. In 1990, the Clifton family who owned the island, sold it to the Falkland Islands Development Corporation (FIDC). They had planted 60,000 stands of tussac grass.[3] Since then, ecotourism has been the only economic activity. In 1986 FIDC constructed the Sea Lion Lodge, with accommodation for 20 guests. It was prefabricated and flown in kit form to the island by Royal Air Force helicopters and has proved to be a success. It is used by tourists and, since 1996, scientific researchers.[1] Since 2017 the Lodge and island has been under the lease of Wild Falkland Ltd.

There is a memorial to HMS Sheffield on Bull Hill in the south of the island.

Flora and fauna

Some 56 species of flowering plants have been recorded, including the Fuegian violet which, in the Falklands, is found nowhere else. The island is known for its marine mammals, including breeding colonies of southern sea lions and southern elephant seals, for which the other islands in the group are haul-out sites. Killer whales are seen offshore.[4] [5] [6], the Elephant Seal Research Group (ESRG) has been tracking the habits of elephant seals at Sea Lion Island.[7] [8] [9]

Birds

The Sea Lion Islands Group has been identified by BirdLife International as an Important Bird Area. It is a significant breeding site for a variety of seabirds and other waterbirds including Falkland steamer ducks, ruddy-headed geese, gentoo penguins (2800 pairs), southern rockhopper penguins (480 pairs), Magellanic penguins, southern giant-petrels (25 pairs) and sooty shearwaters. It also supports populations of striated caracaras (10 pairs), blackish cinclodes, Cobb's wrens and white-bridled finches.[10]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Falklands Philatelic Bureau Islands Series Part 4 - Sea Lion Island
  2. http://www.jncc.gov.uk/pdf/RIS/UK54005.pdf Information Sheet on Ramsar Wetlands
  3. Wigglesworth, Angela. (1992) Falkland People. Pub. Peter Owen.
  4. Yates . O. . Black . A. D. . Palavecino . P. . 2007-06-30 . Site fidelity and behaviour of killer whales (Orcinus orca) at Sea Lion Island in the Southwest Atlantic . Latin American Journal of Aquatic Mammals . 6 . 1 . 10.5597/lajam00112 . 2236-1057.
  5. Web site: Welch . Craig . April 15, 2021 . The hidden world of whale culture . subscription . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210418002256/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/the-hidden-world-of-whale-culture-feature . April 18, 2021 . June 19, 2024 . National Geographic . [Photo] Near Sea Lion Island in the Falklands, female killer whales in a couple of families have learned to nab an elephant seal pup from a nursery and use it to practice hunting with their offspring before eating it.
  6. Web site: Goulding . Rory . 24 October 2011 . Where penguins outnumber people . 2024-06-20 . BBC . en-GB.
  7. Philip . Emma . August 2005 . Sea Lion Island: Working with Tourism . June 19, 2024 . Wildlife Conservation In The Falkland Islands . Falkland Conservation . 7 . 5 . The Elephant Seal Research Group completed their 9th consecutive field season, with the exciting news that one of the male pups tagged in their first year in 1995, has returned and managed to successfully defend his very first harem this year.. (page 103 in PDF collection)
  8. Web site: Elephant Seal Research . 2024-06-20 . Sea Lion Island . en-GB . Since 1995, a small team of Italian researchers have been conducting a long-term study of the southern elephant seal population of Sea Lion Island.
  9. Web site: 30 January 2020 . Demography, ecology and behaviour of southern elephant seals of Sea Lion Island, Falkland Islands (1995-2019) . registration . June 19, 2024 . Falklands Islands Data Portal . Elephant Seal Research Group.
  10. Web site: Sea Lion Islands Group. 2012-10-01 . Important Bird Areas factsheet . BirdLife International . 2012.