The Scott Islands are a group of islands located off the northwestern point of Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
Geography | |
---|---|
Location | Pacific Ocean |
Coordinates | 50°48′09″N 128°46′46″W / 50.80250°N 128.77944°W |
Major islands | 5 |
Administration | |
Province | British Columbia |
Geography
editThe Scott Islands are located about 10 kilometres (6.4 miles) off of Cape Scott Provincial Park. The chain consists of Lanz Island, Cox Island, Sartine Island, Beresford Island, and Triangle Island, along with several smaller islets and rocks.
Ecology
editThe Scott Islands are notable for their large seabird populations, including thick-billed murres, tufted puffins, marbled murrelets, and 55% of the world's breeding population of Cassin's auklets.[1] They are also notable for their large populations of Steller sea lions and rockfish. Sea otters have recently re-colonized the islands. The islands are located in hardiness zone 9b, the warmest in Canada.
Conservation
editLanz and Cox islands are both protected by Lanz and Cox Islands Provincial Park, which is open to the public. Sartine, Triangle, and Beresford are all ecological reserves, which are closed to the public. The waters surrounding the islands are protected by Scott Islands Marine National Wildlife Area.
References
edit- ^ "Scott Islands | CPAWS British Columbia". cpawsbc.org. Retrieved 2017-01-11.