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Greenly Island (South Australia)

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Location
  
Great Australian Bight

Greenly Island (South Australia) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Greenly Island is a 168 ha island located 30 km west-south-west of Point Whidbey, Eyre Peninsula in the Great Australian Bight. The island is uninhabited by humans and provides a haven for marine and terrestrial wildlife. The island and its intertidal zone constitute the Greenly Island Conservation Park. Its adjacent waters are occasionally visited by fishermen targeting yellowtail kingfish.

Contents

Map of Greenly Island, South Australia, Australia

Nomenclature

Greenly Island was named for Sir Isaac Coffin’s fiancée by the British explorer Matthew Flinders on 16 February 1802.

Environment

Greenly Island is a large granite dome with steep sides plunging vertically into deep water, split by two large crevasses which effectively break the island into three blocks. The top of the island is capped with Drooping Sheoak (Allocasuarina verticillata) and Dryland Tea-tree (Melaleuca lanceolata) woodlands while the lower slopes have either a Coastal Tussock (Poa poiformis var. poiformis) grassland or a Marsh Saltbush (Atriplex paludosa var. cordata) shrubland. The main part of the island rises to the east to a steep peak of 230m.

Wildlife

Greenly Island Conservation Park was constituted by statute in 1972 to protect the island’s delicate ecology and haul out areas for Australian sea lion and New Zealand fur seal. western blue groper and yellowtail kingfish are found in the waters off Greenly Island. The tammar wallaby was introduced to Greenly Island (south) in 1905 to provide food for stranded sailors. Their impact on the vegetation is obvious in the marked difference between the north and south islands. Both northern and southern islands support high density populations of bush rats.

Birds recorded on Greenly Island include the Cape Barren goose, white-faced heron, ruddy turnstone, Australian raven, Australian kestrel, white-bellied sea eagle, sooty oystercatcher, welcome swallow, silver gull, Pacific gull, rock parrot, little grassbird, red-capped robin, great cormorant, short-tailed shearwater, crested tern, fairy tern, silvereye and little penguin.

Reptiles recorded on Greenly Island include the bull skink (Egernia multiscutata) and four-toed earless skink (Hemiergis peronii), southern four-toed slider (Lerista dorsalis), dwarf skink (Menetia greyii), Mallee snakeeye (Morethia obscura) and marbled gecko (Phyllodactylus marmoratus).

Little penguins

The first fauna study of Greenly Island was conducted in 1948 and described the little penguins as "innumerable". In 2004, the little penguin colony's population was estimated at 1,500 breeding birds.

References

Greenly Island (South Australia) Wikipedia