Southern Indian Ocean Islands tundra


The Southern Indian Ocean Islands tundra is a tundra ecoregion that includes several subantarctic islands in the southern Indian Ocean.

Location and description

The ecoregion stretches from Prince Edward Islands in the west, past the Crozet Islands to the Kerguelen Islands 1500 km to the east, and includes the active volcano Heard Island and the nearby McDonald Islands.

Flora

These rocky islands support a variety of plant life, such as tussock grasses, that has adapted to the snowy and icy conditions. There are a number of endemic plant species including Poa cookii grass and the Kerguelen cabbage, historically a source of vitamin C for sailors, is found on all the islands, not only the Kerguelens. There are also a number of endemic lichens and liverworts.

Fauna

The islands are home to birds and insects such as butterflies, moths, weevils, and spiders as well as wildlife typical of the southern oceans such as penguins, seals and seabirds. This ecoregion is a melting pot where related Antarctic and subantarctic species and subspecies co-exist, for example the following can all be found here: the sooty albatrosses, light-mantled albatross '', northern giant petrel, southern giant petrel ), Antarctic fur seal and subantarctic fur seal ) on Prince Edward, Crozet and Heard Islands.
Vulnerable or endangered birds include three endemics, the duck, Eaton’s pintail, the large wandering albatross and Kerguelen tern as well as a number of albatrosses , the large gray-headed albatross, and black-browed albatross ), three penguins , macaroni penguin and gentoo penguin ), and a number of petrels and white-chinned petrel ).
Other breeding birds include the land-based black-faced sheathbill and many seabirds brown skua, kelp gull, fulmar prion, Antarctic prion, slender-billed prion, fairy prion, Antarctic tern, Cape petrel, black-bellied storm petrel, grey-backed storm petrel, blue petrel, Wilson’s storm-petrel, common diving petrel, South Georgian diving-petrel, great-winged petrel, white-headed petrel and soft-plumaged petrel.
The largest seabird colonies are on the Prince Edward Islands, followed by the Crozet Islands which have breeding colonies of all six species of albatross as well as more than half the world's population of king penguins.
All six Antarctic seals can be found here, the two fur seals, leopard seal, Weddell seal, southern elephant seal, and crabeater seal ). The fur seals and southern elephant seal breed in the region, and are increasing in numbers now that seal-hunting has stopped, while large numbers of leopard seals winter on the rocks of Heard Island. The colony of southern elephant seals on Heard Island and the Kerguelens is one of the three largest in the world.

Threats and preservation

These isolated islands are relatively unspoilt but their wildlife is not very varied and therefore can be quickly damaged by any human activity and particularly by introduced species of both plants and animals. For example, introduced grasses have taken over areas of some islands, while alien animals include moths, salmon, the mallard duck, rabbits, reindeer, sheep and goats. Cats and mice are a particular problem as both prey on breeding seabird colonies. Another particular threat is the danger to diving seabirds caught by long-line fishing of the Patagonian toothfish in the seas around the islands; gray-headed albatross and white-chinned petrel have been especially damaged by this industry as they habitually follow fishing boats.