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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World

Wildlife of the Chagos islands

Chagos: Chagos archipelago worlds largest coral atolls
The Chagos archipelago is a group of 55 tropical islands over half a million square kilometres in the middle of the Indian Ocean, about 300 miles south of the Maldives. They have belonged to Britain since they were captured from France in 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars
Photograph: Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos: Chagos archipelago worlds largest coral atolls
The archipelago boasts the world's largest coral atoll and the world's cleanest, most pristine waters, that are home to at least 220 coral species and more than 1,000 species of fish
Photograph: Dan Jones/Zoological Society of London
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
The underwater landscape of 6,000m deep trenches, oceanic ridges and sea mounts, is also a refuge and breeding ground for large and important populations of sharks, dolphins, marine turtles, rare crabs, birds and other vulnerable species
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
With 554,000 sq km of reef, the territory would become the largest protected marine area on Earth
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
Sea fans are abundant on Chagos reefs. Nine conservation and scientific organisations including the Marine Conservation Society, the RSPB, the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew have formed the Chagos Environment Network (CEN), which is campaigning to protect the biodiversity of the Chagos islands and surrounding waters alongside a three-month public consultation (pdf) launched by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in November 2009
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos: Chagos archipelago
Pollutant levels in Chagos waters are exceptionally low because of minimal human influence. Since the 1960s the islands have been set aside for defence purposes, with no inhabitants except for the military personnel and civilian contractors at the US military base on Diego Garcia
Photograph: Dan Jones/Zoological Society of London
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
A nurse shark. The islands are a refuge and breeding ground for large and important populations of sharks
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
Because of minimal human impact, the ecosystems of the Chagos have so far proven resilient to climate change and have been largely immune from threats to other reefs worldwide
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
But the Chagos Conservation Trust, a member of the CEN, says legal and illegal fishing has impacted the area despite regulations, with sharks, sea cucumbers, turtles and fish known to have declined
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
A masked booby colony. Over 150,000 pairs of 17 species of seabirds breed on the atolls, and protection of the islands would certainly improve their prospects
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
A lack of inhabitants means the islands are rat-free, and full of nesting birds
Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos Archipelago: Chagos Archipelago
Ground nesting birds are vulnerable in most places. Here they can nest and raise their young in safety Photograph: Anne and Charles Sheppard/Chagos Conservation Trust
Chagos: Chagos Archipelago, Diego Garcia Atoll
Diego Garcia atoll. If done in the right way, the Chagos protected area could be as important as the reserves which protect the Galapagos islands and Great Barrier Reef
Photograph: John Parker/Corbis
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