Guadalupe Island
Guadalupe Island or Isla Guadalupe is a volcanic island located off the west coast of Mexico's Baja California Peninsula and about southwest of the city of Ensenada in the state of Baja California, in the Pacific Ocean.
The two other Mexican island groups in the Pacific Ocean that are not on the continental shelf are Revillagigedo Islands and Rocas Alijos. Guadalupe Island and its islets are the westernmost region of Mexico.
Administration and population
The 2010 census recorded a population of 213 people on the island. Currently it has fewer than 150 permanent residents. Guadalupe is part of Ensenada delegación, one of the 24 delegaciones or subdivisions of Ensenada Municipality of the Mexican state of Baja California. Ensenada delegación and Chapultepec delegación together form the city of Ensenada, the municipal seat of the namesake municipality. The postal code of Guadalupe Island is 22997.Campo Oeste is a small community of abalone and lobster fishermen, located on the western coast, specifically on the north side of West Anchorage, a bay that provides protection from the strong winds and swells that whip the islands during winter. Generators provide electricity, and a military vessel brings of fresh water. The number of fishermen varies annually depending on the fishing season. Ten months of the year the 30 families of the fishing cooperative "Abuloneros and Langosteros of Guadalupe Island" are present.
Additional temporary fishing camps are Campo Norte, Campo Lima and Arroyitos.
An abandoned fishing community, Campo Este, is located near a cove on the eastern shore.
At the southern tip, on Melpómene Cove, there is a weather station staffed by a detachment from the Mexican Ministry of the Navy. The site is called Campamento Sur.
Campo Bosque was established as a temporary camp in 1999 in the cypress forest in the north. The camp houses members of the Cooperative Farming Society "Francisco Javier Maytorena, S.C. of R.L." and removes goats from the island and sells them in the State of Sonora, with permission of Secretariat of the Environment and Natural Resources and the support of the Secretariat of the Navy.
Campo Pista is located at the small airport, near the center of the island. Airport Isla Guadalupe has a runway. At the end of the runway near threshold 5 is the wreckage of a Lockheed Model 18 Lodestar, which overshot the runway during landing. A North American B-25J-30/32 Mitchell, BMM-3501, bomber wrecked on the opposite end of the runway, after suffering serious damage in trying to take-off overloaded. Based on historical Google Earth imagery, this B-25 wreckage appears to have been removed from the location between October, 2005, and June, 2006.
Because Guadalupe Island is located within a biosphere reserve, anyone visiting the island must obtain a permit from the Mexican government; this means the communities on the island are closed towns.
Geography
Guadalupe has a rugged landscape. It consists of two ancient overlapping shield volcanoes, of which the northern and higher volcano is the younger. The island measures north-south and up to east-west, with a total area of. It features a chain of high volcanic mountain ridges which rises to a height of at its northern end. Its smaller counterpart on the southern end is the El Picacho.The southern part of the island is barren, but there are fertile valleys and trees in the northern part. The coast generally consists of rocky bluffs with detached rocks fronting some of them. Two high and prominent islets are within of the southwestern end of the island, separated from one another by a gap called Tuna Alley:
- Islote Afuera,,, the most distant, steep with almost vertical walls above and below water
- Islote Adentro,,, with two smaller islets nearby:
- * Church Rock
- * Roca del Skip
- Islote Negro,,, to the southwest
- Roca Hundida,,, to the southwest
- Islote Bernal,,, to the southwest
- Palto Muerto,,, north of Islote Bernal
- unnamed islet,,, north of Islote Bernal
- Steamboat Rock,, to the west
- Roca Elefante,, to the northwest
- * Roca Elefante is the westernmost point in both Mexico and Latin America.
Climate
Most precipitation occurs over the winter months with strong influence of northwestern winds and cyclones.
Rainfall averages near sea level at the south end but appears to be much more at the high north end. An estimate for the rainfall in the northern highlands is possible by way of taking Pinus radiata as an indicator, which is native to that area of the island. Other places where Pinus radiata is native, it grows best with about of rainfall but under some conditions can survive with as little as half that much. The effective moisture is much greater because of fog drip.
Geology
Guadalupe Island is composed of two shield volcanoes which formed on a now extinct mid-ocean ridge. They are overlain by lava flows and cinder cones that were emplaced along northwest-southeast and northeast-southwest trending fissure vents. The youngest shield volcano comprises the northern end of the island and may have formed during the Holocene epoch. A series of very fresh-looking alkali basalt flows along with trachyte domes in the northern shield volcano caldera represent the most recently formed rocks on Guadalupe Island.Ecology
Guadalupe Island was a major destination for Russian and American fur hunters seeking the Guadalupe fur seal in the 18th and 19th centuries, until they were nearly extinct by 1844. Captain Auguste Duhaut-Cilly reported in 1827 that a Sandwich Islands brig "had spent several months there and collected three thousand sealskins". The northern elephant seal was also ruthlessly hunted for the oil in its blubber.They were thought to be extinct in 1884 until a remnant population of eight individuals was discovered on Guadalupe Island in 1892 by a Smithsonian expedition, who promptly killed several of them for their collections. The elephant seals managed to survive, and were finally protected by the Mexican government in 1922. All surviving northern elephant seals share the same male ancestor.
Guadalupe shares the California chaparral and woodlands ecoregion with the Channel Islands of California in the United States, but the island was at one time practically denuded of all plants higher than a few centimeters by up to 100,000 feral goats.
Originally brought there in the 19th century by European whalers and sealers for provisions when stopping over, the population eventually eliminated most vegetation; the number of goats declined to a few thousand. The main impact of the goat population was before this collapse, about the turn of the 19th/20th century. Naturalist A.W. Anthony wrote in 1901:
"It is directly due to the despised Billy-goat that many interesting species of plants formerly abundant are now extinct, and also that one or more of the birds peculiar to the island has disappeared, and others are following rapidly."
After the crash, the goat population once again grew, this time more slowly, until it had reached the new, lower carrying capacity at maybe 10,000–20,000 in modern times. The island had been a nature conservancy area since August 16, 1928, making it one of the oldest reserves in Mexico. Eradication of the goats was long envisioned, but logistical difficulties such as island size and lack of suitable spots for landing and encamping hunters and material prevented this. In 2002, the Mexican government and the conservation group Grupo de Ecología y Conservación de Islas began eliminating the goats. In June 2005, after many years of false starts, the Mexican government had almost completed a round-up and evacuation of the remaining goat population. In 2007, the goat elimination program ended. Guadalupe Island was designated a biosphere reserve on April 25th, 2005.
French sea captain Auguste Duhaut-Cilly remarked on the tall trees on the north of Guadalupe Island as he sailed past on January 2, 1827. Of the large tree species on Guadalupe Island, there were only old individuals left; California juniper had entirely disappeared. As the goats ate any seedlings that managed to germinate, no regeneration of trees was possible. Water, formerly plentiful as the common fogs condensed in the forests of the northern end of the island, today only occurs in a few scattered pools and springs. Because the springs were a critical emergency water supply for the human inhabitants, protective measures including goat fences were installed beginning in 2000, allowing new seedlings of many species to survive for the first time in 150 years. Seacology, a non-profit environmental group located in Berkeley, CA, provided funding to the Island Conservation & Ecology Group for the construction of ten fenced exclosures to keep goats out of the most sensitive areas of Guadalupe Island.
In November 1850, U.S. Army Lt. George H. Derby passed the island on his expedition in the U.S. Transport Invincible. He described it thus: "This island is about 15 miles length and 5 in width. It is rocky + mountainous but capped with vegetation and is reputed to be thickly inhabited by wild goats of unusual size. Water is found upon the eastern shore and the Island is frequently visited by small vessels engaged in the capture of the sea elephant numbers of which animals are found upon its coast."
Many island or marine species that reside on or near Guadalupe also frequent the Channel Islands, and vice versa. In stark contrast to the rampant extinction of terrestrial life that happened at the same time, Guadalupe was the last refuge for the northern elephant seal and the Guadalupe fur seal in the 1890s. The island has been a pinniped sanctuary since 1975.
Guadalupe is considered one of the best spots in the world for sightings of the great white shark, possibly because of its large population of pinnipeds.
Habitat types
Before the removal of goats, surveys found eight major land habitats on Guadalupe:cone
- Flora of the coastal lowlands and rocky cliffs: mainly up to above mean sea level, but higher on the steep cliffs. Largely unresearched due to difficult access, the cliffs might even harbor remnant specimens of the presumably extinct plants.
- Succulent perennial herbs: ASL, chiefly on the southern end and on the offshore islets, and in less steep areas towards sea level. Here, the highest number of endemic plants exist.
Endemism
Animals:- Guadalupe fur seal – only major breeding site
- Townsend's storm petrel – only known breeding site
- Ainley's storm petrel – only known breeding site
- Guadalupe rock wren – endemic
- Guadalupe house finch – endemic
- Guadalupe pipefish – endemic
- Guadalupe junco – endemic
- Guadalupe caracara – endemic, extinct
- Endemic spiders:
- * Habronattus gigas
- * Herpyllus giganteus
- * Kibramoa isolata
- * Sergiolus guadalupensis
- Baeriopsis guadalupensis – near-endemic
- Brahea edulis – effectively endemic
- Camissonia guadalupensis ssp. guadalupensis – endemic
- Castilleja fruticosa – endemic
- Cistanthe guadalupensis – endemic
- Cupressus guadalupensis var. guadalupensis – endemic
- Cryptantha foliosa – endemic
- Deinandra frutescens – endemic
- Deinandra greeneana ssp. greeneana – endemic
- Deinandra palmeri – endemic
- Dudleya guadalupensis – endemic
- Dudleya virens ssp. extima – endemic
- Eriogonum zapatoense – endemic
- Erysimum moranii – endemic
- Eschscholzia elegans – near-endemic
- Eschscholzia palmeri – endemic
- Galium angulosum – endemic
- Githopsis diffusa var. guadalupensis – endemic
- Hemizonia frutescens – endemic
- Hemizonia greeneana ssp. greeneana – endemic
- Hemizonia palmeri – endemic
- Heteromeles arbutifolia var. macrocarpa – probably endemic
- Lavatera lindsayi – endemic
- Lupinus niveus – endemic
- Marah guadalupensis – near-endemic or endemic
- Perityle incana – endemic
- Phacelia phyllomanica – endemic
- Pinus radiata var. binata – near-endemic or endemic
- Satureja palmeri – endemic; rediscovered in 2001–2003 surveys
- Senecio palmeri – endemic
- Sphaeralcea palmeri – endemic
- Sphaeralcea sulphurea – endemic
- Stephanomeria guadalupensis – endemic
- Triteleia guadalupensis – endemic
Extinctions
There have been 5–6 extinctions of birds:
- Guadalupe Bewick's wren, late 1890s,
- Guadalupe spotted towhee, late 1890s
- The Guadalupe caracara was intentionally made extinct by humans around 1901, ironically because it occasionally preyed on young goats.
- Guadalupe flicker, c. 1910 – the island was later recolonized by individuals of the nominate subspecies
- Guadalupe storm petrel, 1910s
- The Guadalupe ruby-crowned kinglet is close to extinction, if it indeed still exists. It was not observed in 2000 despite thorough searches.
- Castilleja guadalupensis
- Hesperelaea palmeri
- Pogogyne tenuiflora