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The Nature Conservancy in Africa - Conservation in Africa

The Nature Conservancy in Asia Pacific - Conservation in Asia-Pacific

The Nature Conservancy in the Caribbean - Conservation in the Caribbean

The Nature Conservancy in Central America - Conservation in Central America

The Nature Conservancy in North America - Conservation in North America

The Nature Conservancy in the United States - Conservation in the United States

The Nature Conservancy in South America - Conservation in South America

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Palmyra Atoll Facts

Location
The northernmost atoll of the Line Islands chain in the Pacific Ocean, 1,052 miles South/Southwest of Hawaii (5 degrees, 52 minutes North, 162 degrees, 6 minutes West).  Map...

Area/Size
Palmyra Atoll is the second largest of 10 atolls under U.S. jurisdiction.  680 emergent (above water) acres, 15,512 acres of submerged reefs and aquamarine lagoons.

Climate
Humid equatorial tropics. Light, variable winds with an average of 175 inches of rain a year.

Population
Palmyra has attracted its share of visitors - from Polynesians to modern maritime explorers - but no one has ever settled here.  Palmyra has the only uninhabited islands in the Line Islands Archipelago.  Palmyra Atoll is also the only undeveloped and unpopulated "wet" atoll left in the tropical Pacific.

Research
Excellent site for the study of global climate change. Core samples taken from living and dead coral heads has produced 1,100 years of temperature information.

Species

  • Represents the most important unprotected marine wilderness area left in the U.S. tropics.
        • Supports five times as many coral species as the Florida Keys and three times as any as Hawaii and the Caribbean, ranking it as one of the most diverse and spectacular coral reef systems in the world.
  • Habitat to the world's largest land invertebrate, the rare coconut crab.
  • One of the largest remaining undisturbed stands of Pisonia beach forest in the world.
  • One of the largest red-footed booby populations in the world, second only to the Galapagos Islands.

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