All Topics  
Juan Fernández Islands

 
Juan Fernández Islands

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Juan Fernández Islands



 
 
The Juan Fernández Islands is a sparsely inhabited island group reliant on tourism and fishing in the South Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean

The Pacific Ocean is the largest of the Earth's oceanic divisions. Its name is derived from the Latin name Mare Pacificum, "peaceful sea", bestowed upon it by the Portugal explorer Ferdinand Magellan....
, situated about 667 km off the coast of Chile
Chile

Chile, officially the Republic of Chile , is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow coastal strip wedged between the Andes mountains and the Pacific Ocean....
, and is composed of several volcanic islands:



The islands are mainly known for having been the home to the sailor Alexander Selkirk
Alexander Selkirk

Alexander Selkirk, born Alexander Selcraig , was a Scotland sailor who spent four years as a castaway when he was marooning on an uninhabited island....
 for four years, which may have inspired the novel Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe

Robinson Crusoe is a novel by Daniel Defoe. It was first published in 1719 and sometimes regarded as the first novel in English. The book is a fictional autobiography of the title character, an English castaway who spends 28 years on a remote tropical island near Venezuela, encountering Indigenous peoples of the Americas, captives, and mu...
.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Juan Fernández Islands'
Start a new discussion about 'Juan Fernández Islands'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Archpielago Juan Fernandez (vista Hacia Robinson Crusoe)
The Juan Fernández Islands is a sparsely inhabited island group reliant on tourism and fishing in the South Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean

The Pacific Ocean is the largest of the Earth's oceanic divisions. Its name is derived from the Latin name Mare Pacificum, "peaceful sea", bestowed upon it by the Portugal explorer Ferdinand Magellan....
, situated about 667 km off the coast of Chile
Chile

Chile, officially the Republic of Chile , is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow coastal strip wedged between the Andes mountains and the Pacific Ocean....
, and is composed of several volcanic islands:

  • Robinson Crusoe
    Robinson Crusoe Island

    Robinson Crusoe Island , formerly known as M?s a Tierra or Aguas Buenas, is the largest island of the Chilean Juan Fern?ndez Islands, situated 674 kilometres west of South America in the South Pacific Ocean....
    , (also known as Isla Más a Tierra), located closest to the mainland
    Mainland

    Mainland is usually the continental part of a region, as opposed to the islands nearby. Sometimes the residents are called "the Mainlanders". As a result of the usually larger area of mainland, there are significantly more mainlanders than islanders, and mainlander culture and politics sometimes threaten to dominate those of the islands....
     of continental South America
    South America

    South America is the southern continent of the Americas, situated entirely in the Western Hemisphere and mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a relatively small portion in the Northern Hemisphere....
    , and its surrounding islets:
    • Juananga, (Islote Juananga)
    • Santa Clara
      Santa Clara (Juan Fernández Islands)

      Santa Clara is the smallest of the mainland islands in the Juan Fern?ndez Islands. It is located 1.5 km from the south coast of Robinson Crusoe Island....
        (Isla Santa Clara), an islet located 1 km southwest of Robinson Crusoe
      Robinson Crusoe Island

      Robinson Crusoe Island , formerly known as M?s a Tierra or Aguas Buenas, is the largest island of the Chilean Juan Fern?ndez Islands, situated 674 kilometres west of South America in the South Pacific Ocean....
  • Alejandro Selkirk Island
    Alejandro Selkirk Island

    Alejandro Selkirk Island, previously known as Isla M?s Afuera, is the second largest and most westernly island of the Juan Fern?ndez Islands....
      (also known as Isla Más Afuera), 181 km further west.


The islands are mainly known for having been the home to the sailor Alexander Selkirk
Alexander Selkirk

Alexander Selkirk, born Alexander Selcraig , was a Scotland sailor who spent four years as a castaway when he was marooning on an uninhabited island....
 for four years, which may have inspired the novel Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe

Robinson Crusoe is a novel by Daniel Defoe. It was first published in 1719 and sometimes regarded as the first novel in English. The book is a fictional autobiography of the title character, an English castaway who spends 28 years on a remote tropical island near Venezuela, encountering Indigenous peoples of the Americas, captives, and mu...
. The islands have an area of 181 km², of which 93 km² are taken up by Robinson Crusoe (together with Santa Clara), and 33 km² by Alexander Selkirk. The population is 633 (all on Robinson Crusoe); of those 598 reside in the capital, San Juan Bautista, on Cumberland Bay on the north coast of the island (2002 census).

The archipelago
Archipelago

An archipelago is a chain or cluster of islands that are formed tectonically. The word archipelago literally means "chief sea", from Italian language arcipelago , derived ultimately from Greek language arkhon and pelagos ....
 administratively belongs to Chile
Chile

Chile, officially the Republic of Chile , is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow coastal strip wedged between the Andes mountains and the Pacific Ocean....
's Region of Valparaíso
Valparaíso Region

The V Valpara?so Region is one of Chile's 15 first order administrative divisions. Its capital is the port city of Valpara?so....
 (which also includes Easter Island
Easter Island

Easter Island is a Polynesian island in the southeastern Pacific Ocean, at the southeastern most point of the Polynesian triangle. The island is a special territory of Chile....
), and more specifically forms one of the nine comunas (municipalities
Municipality

A municipality is an administrative entity composed of a clearly defined territory and its population and commonly denotes a city, town, or village, or a small grouping of them....
) of the province of Valparaíso, namely Juan Fernández.

History

The archipelago was discovered by chance on November 22 1574, by the Spanish
Spanish people

Spanish people or Spaniards are a nation or ethnic group native to Spain, in the Iberian Peninsula of southwestern Europe. They are often considered an amalgam of different ethnic groups, rather than an ethnic group by itself....
 sailor Juan Fernández
Juan Fernández

Juan Fern?ndez was a Spain explorer and navigator. Probably between 1563 and 1574 he discovered the Juan Fern?ndez Islands west of Valpara?so, Chile....
, who was sailing between Peru
Peru

Peru , officially the Republic of Peru , is a country in western South America. It is bordered on the north by Ecuador and Colombia, on the east by Brazil, on the southeast by Bolivia, on the south by Chile, and on the west by the Pacific Ocean....
 and Valparaíso
Valparaíso

Valpara?so is a major city in Chile and one of that country's most important seaports and an increasingly vital cultural center in the hemisphere's Pacific Southwest....
 and deviated from his planned course. He called the islands Más Afuera, Más a Tierra, and Islote de Santa Clara.

In the 17th and 18th century it was used as a hideout for pirates, and provided a location for a penal colony. In the 1740s, it was visited by Commodore Anson's flotilla during his ill-fated venture to the South Seas.

The location of the archipelago was fixed by Alessandro Malaspina
Alessandro Malaspina

Alessandro Malaspina was an Italian explorers nobleman who spent most of his life as a Spain naval officer and explorer. Under a Spanish royal commission, he undertook a voyage around the world from 1786-1788, then, from 1789-1794, a scientific expedition throughout the Pacific Ocean, exploring and mapping much of the west coast of the Ameri...
 in 1790. Previous charts had differed on the location.

In late 1914 the islands were the rendezvous for Admiral Maximilian von Spee
Maximilian von Spee

Vice Admiral Maximilian Graf von Spee was a Germany admiral. Although he was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, the counts von Spee belonged to the prominent families of the Rhenish nobility....
's East Asiatic Squadron as he gathered his ships together prior to defeating the British under Admiral Christopher Cradock
Christopher Cradock

Rear Admiral Sir Christopher George Francis Maurice Cradock, Royal Victorian Order, Order of the Bath, Royal Navy, was a United_Kingdom admiral....
 at the Battle of Coronel
Battle of Coronel

The World War I naval Battle of Coronel took place on 1 November 1914 off the coast of central Chile near the city of Coronel, Chile. Imperial Germany Kaiserliche Marine forces led by Vice-Admiral Maximilian von Spee met and defeated a Royal Navy squadron commanded by Rear-Admiral Sir Christopher Cradock....
. Following the Royal Navy's revenge at the Battle of the Falkland Islands
Battle of the Falkland Islands

The Battle of the Falkland Islands was a Royal Navy victory over the Kaiserliche Marine on 8 December 1914 during the World War I in the South Atlantic....
 a month later, the only surviving German cruiser, SMS Dresden, was finally hunted down and cornered at Más a Tierra early in 1915, where she was scuttled after a brief battle with British cruisers.

In 1966 the Chilean government renamed Isla Más Afuera to Alejandro Selkirk and Isla Más a Tierra to Robinson Crusoe, in order to promote tourism. Incidentally, Selkirk never set foot on Más Afuera, only on Más a Tierra.

In July 30 2007, a constitutional reform gave the Juan Fernández Islands and Easter Island the status of special territories of Chile. Pending the enactment of a special charter, the archipelago will continue to be governed as a municipality of the Valparaíso Region
Valparaíso Region

The V Valpara?so Region is one of Chile's 15 first order administrative divisions. Its capital is the port city of Valpara?so....
.

Geology

The islands are volcanic
Volcano

A volcano is an opening, or rupture, in a planet's surface or Crust , which allows hot, molten rock, ash, and gases to escape from below the surface....
 in origin, and were created by a hotspot
Hotspot (geology)

In geology, a hotspot is a location on the Earth's surface that has experienced active volcano for a long period of time. J. Tuzo Wilson came up with the idea in 1963 that volcanic chains like the Hawaiian Islands result from the slow movement of a tectonic plate across a "fixed" hot spot deep beneath the surface of the planet....
 in the earth's mantle that broke through the Nazca Plate
Nazca Plate

The Nazca Plate, named after the Nazca region of southern Peru, is an oceanic tectonic plate in the eastern Pacific Ocean basin off the west coast of South America....
 to form the islands, which were then carried eastward off the hot spot as the Nazca Plate subducts under the South America
South America

South America is the southern continent of the Americas, situated entirely in the Western Hemisphere and mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a relatively small portion in the Northern Hemisphere....
n continent. Radiometric dating
Radiometric dating

Radiometric dating is a technique used to date materials, usually based on a comparison between the observed abundance of a naturally occurring radioactive isotope and its decay products, using known decay rates....
 indicates that Santa Clara is the oldest of the islands, 5.8 million years old, followed by Robinson Crusoe, 3.8-4.2 million years old, and Alexander Selkirk, 1.0-2.4 million years old. Robinson Crusoe is the largest of the islands, at 93 km² and the highest peak, El Yunque, is 916 meters. Alexander Selkirk is 50 km²; its highest peak is Los Inocentes at 1319 meters. Santa Clara is 2.2 km², and reaches 350 meters.

Climate

Orthographic Projection Centred Over Juan Fernandez
The islands have a subtropical climate, influenced by the cold Humboldt Current
Humboldt Current

The Humboldt Current is a cold, low-salinity ocean current that flows north-westward along the west coast of South America from the southern tip of Chile to northern Peru....
 which flows northward along the South American coast east of the islands, and the southeast trade winds. The temperature ranges from 3-34 °C, with an annual mean of 15.4 °C. Higher elevations are generally cooler, with occasional frosts on Robinson Crusoe. Rainfall is higher in the winter months, and varies with elevation and exposure; elevations above 500 meters experience almost daily rainfall, while the western, leeward side of Robinson Crusoe and Santa Clara are quite dry. Average annual rainfall is 1081 mm, varying from 318 to 1698 mm year to year. Much of the variability in rainfall depends on the El Niño-Southern Oscillation.

Ecology

The Juan Fernández islands are home to a high percentage of rare and endemic
Endemic (ecology)

Endemism is the ecological state of being unique to a particular geographic location, such as a specific island, Habitat type, nation, or other defined zone....
 plants and animals, and are recognized as a distinct ecoregion
Ecoregion

An ecoregion , sometimes called a bioregion, is an ecology and geographically defined area smaller than a "realm" or "ecozone". Ecoregions cover relatively large areas of land or water, and contain characteristic, geographically distinct assemblages of natural community and species....
. The volcanic origin and remote location of the islands meant that the islands' flora and fauna had to reach the archipelago from far across the sea; as a result, the island has relatively few plants and very few animals. The closest relatives of the archipelago's plants and animals are found in the Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests
Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests

Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests are a temperate and humid biome. The typical structure of these forests include four layers. The upper most layer is the canopy which is composed of tall mature trees....
 ecoregions of southern South America
South America

South America is the southern continent of the Americas, situated entirely in the Western Hemisphere and mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a relatively small portion in the Northern Hemisphere....
, including the Valdivian temperate rain forests
Valdivian temperate rain forests

The Valdivian temperate rain forests are a Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests terrestrial ecoregion located on the west coast of southern South America, lying mostly in Chile and extending into a small part of Argentina....
, Magellanic subpolar forests
Magellanic subpolar forests

The Magellanic subpolar forests are a terrestrial ecoregion of southernmost South America, covering parts of southern Chile and Argentina, and is part of the Neotropic ecozone....
, and Desventuradas Islands
Desventuradas Islands

The Desventuradas Islands are relatively small oceanic islands located approximately 870 km off the coast of Chile; they are part of the Valpara?so municipality....
.

Flora

Isla Mas Atierra Juan Fernandez (chile)
There are 209 native species of vascular plant
Vascular plant

Vascular plants are those plants that have lignin tissue for conducting water, minerals, and photosynthetic products through the plant. Vascular plants include the ferns, clubmosses, flowering plants, conifers and other gymnosperms....
s in the Juan Fernandez Islands, approximately 150 of which are flowering plant
Flowering plant

The flowering plants or angiosperms are the most widespread group of Embryophytes. The flowering plants and the gymnosperms are the only extant groups of Spermatophyte....
s, and 50 are ferns. 126 species, or 62%, are endemic, with 12 endemic genera
Genus

A genus is a low-level taxonomic rank used in the classification of living and fossil organisms. The taxonomic ranks are domain , kingdom , phylum, class , order , family , genus, and species....
 and one endemic family
Family (biology)

In biological classification, family is a taxonomic rank. Exact details of formal nomenclature depend on the Nomenclature Codes which applies....
, Lactoridaceae. Many plants are characteristic of the Antarctic flora
Antarctic flora

The Antarctic flora is a distinct community of vascular plants which evolved millions of years ago on the supercontinent of Gondwana, and is now found on several separate areas of the Southern Hemisphere, including southern South America, southernmost Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Tasmania, and New Caledonia....
, and are related to plants found in southern South America
South America

South America is the southern continent of the Americas, situated entirely in the Western Hemisphere and mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, with a relatively small portion in the Northern Hemisphere....
, New Zealand
New Zealand

New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses , and numerous Islands of New Zealand, most notably Stewart Island/Rakiura and the Chatham Islands....
 and Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
.

Vegetation zones generally correspond to elevation, with grasslands and shrublands at lower elevations, tall and montane forests at middle elevations, and shrublands at the highest elevations. The two main islands have somewhat distinct plant communities.

Alexander Selkirk is mostly covered with grassland from 0-400 meters, interspersed with wooded ravines (quebradas), home to dry forests of Myrceugenia
Myrceugenia

Myrceugenia is a genus of evergreen woody flowering plant trees and shrubs belonging to the Myrtle family, Myrtaceae. The genus is native to South America from southeast Brazil south to southern Chile; it is closely related to the genus Luma ; some botanists include Myrceugenia in that genus....
 and Fagara
Fagara

Fagara is a genus of plant in family Rutaceae. It contains the following species :* Fagara externa, Skottsb.* Fagara mayu, Engler...
. From 400 to 600 meters are lower montane forests, with upper montane forest from 600 to 950 meters. The treeline is at approximately 950 meters, above which is alpine shrubland and grassland, dominated by temperate Magellanic
Magellanic subpolar forests

The Magellanic subpolar forests are a terrestrial ecoregion of southernmost South America, covering parts of southern Chile and Argentina, and is part of the Neotropic ecozone....
 vegetation such as Acaena
Acaena

Acaena is a genus of about one hundred species of perennial plant herbs and subshrubs in the Rosaceae, native mainly to the Southern Hemisphere, notably New Zealand, Australia and South America, but with a few species extending into the Northern Hemisphere, north to Hawaii and California ....
, Dicksonia
Dicksonia

Dicksonia is a genus of tree ferns in the order Cyatheales. It is regarded as related to Cyathea, but is considered more primitive, dating back at least to the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods....
, Drimys
Drimys

Drimys is a genus of about eight species of woody evergreen flowering plants, in the family Winteraceae. The species are native to the Neotropics, ranging from southern Mexico to the southern tip of South America....
, Empetrum, Gunnera
Gunnera

Gunnera is a genus of herbaceous flowering plants, some of them gigantic. The genus is the only member of the family Gunneraceae.The 40-50 species vary enormously in leaf size....
, Myrteola, Pernettya
, and Ugni
Ugni

Ugni is a genus of about 10 species of plants in the myrtle family Myrtaceae, native to western South America and Central America from the Valdivian temperate rain forests of southern Chile north to southern Mexico, and also the Juan Fern?ndez Islands off Chile....
.

On Robinson Crusoe, grasslands predominate from 0-100 meters; introduced shrubs from 100-300 meters; tall forests from 300-500 meters; montane forests from 500-700 meters, with dense tree cover of Cuminia
Cuminia

Cuminia is a genus of flowering plant in the Lamiaceae family.It contains the following species:* Cuminia eriantha*
Cuminia fernandezia...
, Fagara
Fagara

Fagara is a genus of plant in family Rutaceae. It contains the following species :* Fagara externa, Skottsb.* Fagara mayu, Engler...
, and Rhaphithamnus
Rhaphithamnus

Rhaphithamnus is a genus of plant in family Verbenaceae. It contains the following species :* Rhaphithamnus venustus, Rob....
; tree fern forests from 700-750 meters, and brushwood forests above 750 meters. Santa Clara is covered with grassland.

Three endemic species dominate the tall and lower montane forests of the archipelago, Drimys
Drimys

Drimys is a genus of about eight species of woody evergreen flowering plants, in the family Winteraceae. The species are native to the Neotropics, ranging from southern Mexico to the southern tip of South America....
 confertifolia
on both main islands, Myrceugenia
Myrceugenia

Myrceugenia is a genus of evergreen woody flowering plant trees and shrubs belonging to the Myrtle family, Myrtaceae. The genus is native to South America from southeast Brazil south to southern Chile; it is closely related to the genus Luma ; some botanists include Myrceugenia in that genus....
 fernandeziana
on Robinson Crusoe, and M. schulzei on Alexander Selkirk. Endemic tree fern species of southern hemisphere genus Dicksonia
Dicksonia

Dicksonia is a genus of tree ferns in the order Cyatheales. It is regarded as related to Cyathea, but is considered more primitive, dating back at least to the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods....
 (D. berteriana on Robinson Crusoe and D. externa on Alexander Selkirk) and the endemic genus Thyrsopteris
Thyrsopteris

Thyrsopteris is a predominant plant genus in the Juan Fernandez Archipelago. It is a tree fern genus with a single species, Thyrsopteris elegans, in the family Thyrsopteridaceae....
 (T. elegans) are the predominant species in the tree-fern forests. An endemic species of sandalwood, Santalum
Santalum

Santalum is a genus of woody flowering plants, the most well known and commercially valuable of which is the Indian Sandalwood tree, Santalum album....
 fernandezianum
, was overexploited for its fragrant wood, has not been seen since 1908, and is believed extinct. The Chonta Palm (Juania australis) is endangered.

Fauna

Isla Mas Afuera Juan Fernandez (chile)
The Juan Fernández Islands have a very limited fauna, with no native land mammal
Mammal

Mammals are a class of vertebrate animals whose name is derived from their distinctive feature, mammary glands, with which they feed their young....
s, reptile
Reptile

Reptiles, or members of the class Reptilia, are air-breathing, cold-blooded vertebrates that have skin covered in scale as opposed to hair or feathers....
s, or amphibians. Seventeen land and sea-bird species breed on the islands. The island has three endemic bird species, and two endemic subspecies. Robinson Crusoe Island is home to an endemic and endangered hummingbird
Hummingbird

Hummingbirds are birds in the family Trochilidae, and are endemic to the Americas. They can hover in mid-air by rapidly flapping their wings 15?200 times per second ....
, the Juan Fernández Firecrown
Juan Fernandez Firecrown

The Juan Fern?ndez Firecrown is a hummingbird found solely on Robinson Crusoe Island, one of a three-island archipelago belonging to Chile. It is non-migratory and shares the island with the smaller Green-backed Firecrown Sephanoides sephaniodes ....
 (Sephanoides fernandensis). This large hummingbird, about 11 cm (5 in) long, is thought to number only about 500 individuals. The other endemic bird species are the Juan Fernández Tit-tyrant
Juan Fernández Tit-Tyrant

The Juan Fern?ndez Tit-Tyrant is a species of bird in the Tyrannidae family.It is Endemism to Chile.Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, rural gardens, and urban areas....
 (Anairetes fernandezianus) of Robinson Crusoe Island, and the Masafuera Rayadito
Masafuera Rayadito

The Masafuera Rayadito, Aphrastura masafuerae, is a rare bird Endemism to Alejandro Selkirk Island in the Juan Fern?ndez Islands. The species is a member of the ovenbird family and only one of two species in the rayadito genus....
 (Aphrastura masafuerae) of Alejandro Selkirk Island. Introduced fauna by humans include rats and goats, which castaway Alexander Selkirk
Alexander Selkirk

Alexander Selkirk, born Alexander Selcraig , was a Scotland sailor who spent four years as a castaway when he was marooning on an uninhabited island....
 survived on during his four year stay from 1705 to 1709; his travails provided the inspiration for Daniel Defoe
Daniel Defoe

Daniel Defoe , born Daniel Foe, was an United Kingdom writer, journalist, and pamphleteer, who gained enduring fame for his novel Robinson Crusoe....
's novel Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe

Robinson Crusoe is a novel by Daniel Defoe. It was first published in 1719 and sometimes regarded as the first novel in English. The book is a fictional autobiography of the title character, an English castaway who spends 28 years on a remote tropical island near Venezuela, encountering Indigenous peoples of the Americas, captives, and mu...
.

The Magellanic Penguin
Magellanic Penguin

The Magellanic Penguin, Spheniscus magellanicus, is a South American penguin, breeding in coastal Argentina, Chile and the Falkland Islands, with some bird migration to Brazil....
 breeds at Robinson Crusoe Island within this archepelago. The endemic
Endemic

Endemic, in a broad sense, can mean "belonging" or "native to", "characteristic of", or "prevalent in" a particular geography, race, field, area, or Natural environment; native to an area or scope....
 Juan-Fernandez spiny lobster (without claws) lives in the marine waters (Jasus frontalis).

The Juan Fernandez Fur Seal
Juan Fernandez Fur Seal

The Juan Fern?ndez Fur Seal is a fur seal that breeds on the Juan Fern?ndez Islands off the coast of Chile. It is the second smallest of the pinnipeds ....
 (Arctocephalus philippii) lives on the islands. This species was nearly exterminated in the sixteenth to nineteenth century, but it was rediscovered in 1965. A census in 1970 indicated about 750 fur seals present in the Archipelago. Only two were sighted on the Desventuradas Islands
Desventuradas Islands

The Desventuradas Islands are relatively small oceanic islands located approximately 870 km off the coast of Chile; they are part of the Valpara?so municipality....
. The actual population of the Desventuradas may be higher, because the species tends to hide in sea caves. There seems to be a yearly population increase of 16–17%.

External links