Pew, National Geographic Applaud Creation of Pitcairn Islands Marine Reserve
U.K. government establishes world’s largest fully protected marine reserve; sets new standard for monitoring
LONDON (March 18, 2015)—The Pew Charitable Trusts and the National Geographic Society praised action by the British
government today to create the world’s largest fully protected marine reserve around the Pitcairn Islands, an overseas
territory in the South Pacific Ocean.
The 834,334-square-kilometre (322,138-square-mile) reserve is roughly 3 ½ times the size of the United Kingdom. Home to
at least 1,249 species of marine mammals, seabirds and fish, the new reserve protects some of the most near-pristine
ocean habitat on Earth. In 2013, Pew and National Geographic joined the local elected body, the Pitcairn Island Council,
in submitting a proposal calling for the creation of a marine reserve to protect these spectacular waters.
“With this designation, the United Kingdom raises the bar for protection of our ocean and sets a new standard for others
to follow,” said Matt Rand, director of Global Ocean Legacy, a project of Pew and its partners that advocates for the
establishment of the world’s great marine parks. “The United Kingdom is the caretaker of more than 6 million square
kilometres of ocean — the fifth-largest marine area of any country. Through this designation, British citizens are
playing a vital role in ensuring the health of our seas. The Pitcairn Islands Marine Reserve will build a refuge of
untouched ocean to protect and conserve a wealth of marine life.”
“Today’s action by British Prime Minister David Cameron will protect the true bounty of the Pitcairn Islands — the array
of unique marine life in the surrounding pristine seas,” said National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Enric Sala, head
of the Society’s Pristine Seas project. “Our scientific exploration of the area revealed entirely new species as well as
an abundance of top predators like sharks. It was like traveling to a new world full of hidden and unknown treasures, a
world that will now be preserved for generations to come.”
“The people of Pitcairn are extremely excited about designation of the world’s largest marine reserve in our vast and
unspoiled waters of the Pitcairn Islands, including Ducie, Oeno, and Henderson Islands,” said the Pitcairn Island
Council. “We are proud to have developed and led this effort in partnership with Pew and National Geographic to protect
these spectacular waters we call home for generations to come.”
A March 2012 scientific survey of Pitcairn’s marine environment, led by the National Geographic Pristine Seas project in
partnership with Pew, revealed a vibrant ecosystem that includes the world’s deepest-known living plant, a species of
encrusting coralline algae found 382 metres (1,253 feet) below sea level. The reserve also protects one of the two
remaining raised coral atolls on the planet as well as 40 Mile Reef, the deepest and most well-developed coral reef
known in the world.
In conjunction with the designation, the Bertarelli Foundation announced a five-year commitment to support the
monitoring of the Pitcairn Islands Marine Reserve as part of Pew’s Project Eyes on the Seas, using a technology known as
the Virtual Watch Room. With this satellite monitoring system, developed through a collaboration between Pew and the
U.K.-based company Satellite Applications Catapult, government officials will be able to detect illegal fishing activity
in real time. This is the first time any government has combined creation of a marine reserve with the most up-to-date
technology for surveillance and enforcement of a protected area.
Ernesto Bertarelli of the Bertarelli Foundation said, “Advances in tracking technology are enabling us to monitor the
ocean as never before and make marine reserves truly enforceable; these solutions, along with the commitment of
individual governments, are bringing about changes in how we protect the marine environment.”
Numerous British scientific and conservation organizations, including the Royal Society for Protection of Birds, the
Blue Marine Foundation, Greenpeace UK, the Marine Conservation Society, the Zoological Society of London, and
Parliament’s Environmental Audit Committee, supported the designation of the Pitcairn Islands Marine Reserve.
Today’s announcement is part of a growing international movement to safeguard important places in the sea that has
protected more than 6.5 million square kilometres (2.5 million square miles) to date. Much of this activity has taken
place over the last nine years. In April 2010, the British government created the Chagos Marine Reserve in the Indian
Ocean — until today the largest continuous, fully protected area of ocean in the world. Most recently, in September
2014, U.S. President Barack Obama significantly expanded the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument, first
created by President George W. Bush, in the south-central Pacific.
Despite these successes, only about 1 percent of the world’s ocean is fully protected.
ENDS