Protecting Seychelles' Avian Treasures
Conservation
Étoile and Boudeuse are protected under the Wild Birds Protection (Nature Reserve) Regulations 1966, while African Banks has been protected by a special order designed to prevent unauthorised entry.
BirdLife International recognises all three as Important Bird Areas (IBAs) due to their seabird populations. Despite legal protection, the absence of conservation enforcement means that poaching is a serious problem.
The Sooty Tern colony of African Banks was estimated at over 40,000 pairs in 1955, about 20,000 in 1974 and only 10,000 pairs by 1995.
African Banks is also one of the few Seychelles breeding sites for Greater Crested Tern, Black-naped Tern and Roseate Tern as well as the more common Brown Noddy and Wedge-tailed Shearwater.
Étoile hosts one of only four known breeding sites for Roseate Tern in Seychelles, one of the rarest seabirds of the Indian Ocean.
Greater Crested Terns and Brown Noddy also breed. Boudeuse hosts one of the few surviving colonies of Masked Booby. Brown Booby were exterminated from Boudeuse at one time but in 2013, ICS discovered a small number of pairs breeding.
Hawksbill and Green Turtles both breed at all three islands but the future of birds and turtles is uncertain as long as poaching remains uncontrolled. Étoile and Boudeuse are treeless while African Banks has just a few Coconut Palms. Low plants dominate all three. Boudeuse remains one of the most pristine tropical coral cays in the world, with no introduced vegetation.