Protection is underway for the Scott Islands Archipelago, five islands off the northern tip of Vancouver Island and the largest single seabird colony on sa国际传媒鈥檚 West Coast.
鈥淭he archipelago and the surrounding water make up the most productive and biologically diverse marine eco-systems on the Canadian Pacific coast,鈥 said Erika聽Lok, marine habitat planner for the Canadian Wildlife Service.
鈥淭he government of sa国际传媒 is committed to establishing the Scott Islands marine natural wildlife area,鈥 said Lok in a telephone interview from CWS Pacific headquarters in Delta.
The islands, about 10 kilometres off Cape Scott, are the annual nesting home to about 1.1 million seabirds, 40 per cent of the nesting population of sa国际传媒
Among the nesting birds are more than half of the province鈥檚 nesting Cassin鈥檚 auklets, most of whose world population nests along the sa国际传媒 coast. Also nesting on the Scott Islands are 90 per cent of sa国际传媒鈥檚 tufted puffins and 95 per cent of the country鈥檚 common murres.
The federal protection move, the subject of discussions with the province and industry, will safeguard more than 11,000 square kilometres of ocean. It鈥檚 crucial foraging area for seabirds to take fish and tiny marine creatures as food for themselves and their young.
Lok said the archipelago鈥檚 three smaller, outer islands 鈥 Triangle, Sartine and Beresford 鈥 are free of predators and rats, crucial for viable seabird nesting colonies. Those three have already been protected as provincial ecological reserves.
The two largest islands, Cox and Lanz, are host to raccoon and mink, both introduced deliberately in the 1920s and 鈥30s for raising fur.
But Lok said predator eradication has been done successfully elsewhere around the world and could be considered.
Seabird species nesting in sa国际传媒
Fork-tailed storm petrel
Leach鈥檚 storm petrel
Double-crested cormorant
Brandt鈥檚 cormorant
Pelagic cormorant
Glaucous-winged gull
Common murre
Thick-billed murre
Pigeon guillemot
Marbled murrelet
Ancient murrelet
Cassin鈥檚 auklet
Rhinoceros auklet
Tufted puffin
Horned puffin
Black oystercatcher (A shorebird, not a seabird, but included because it nests only in the coastal environment and on many of the same islands as seabirds.)