and tree Phylica'' on Gough Island Gough and
Inaccessible Island are a protected
wildlife reserve, which has been designated a
World Heritage Site by
UNESCO. It has been described as one of the least disrupted
ecosystems of its kind and one of the best shelters for nesting
seabirds in the Atlantic. In particular, it is host to almost the entire world population of the
Tristan albatross (
Diomedea dabbenena) and the
Atlantic petrel (
Pterodroma incerta). The island is also home to the almost flightless
Gough moorhen, and the critically endangered
Gough bunting.
Birds The island has been identified as an
Important Bird Area (IBA) by
BirdLife International for its endemic landbirds and as a breeding site for
seabirds. Birds for which the IBA has conservation significance include
northern rockhopper penguins (30,000 breeding pairs),
Tristan albatrosses (1,500–2,000 pairs),
sooty albatrosses (5,000 pairs),
Atlantic yellow-nosed albatrosses (5,000 pairs),
broad-billed prions (1,750,000 pairs),
Kerguelen petrels (20,000 pairs),
soft-plumaged petrels (400,000 pairs),
Atlantic petrels (900,000 pairs),
great-winged petrels (5,000 pairs),
grey petrels (10,000 pairs),
great shearwaters (100,000 pairs),
little shearwaters (10,000 pairs),
grey-backed storm petrels (10,000 pairs),
white-faced storm petrels (10,000 pairs),
white-bellied storm petrels (10,000 pairs),
Antarctic terns (500 pairs),
southern skuas (500 pairs),
Gough moorhens (2,500 pairs), and
Gough buntings (3,000 individuals).
Mammals Southern right whales migrate around the island, but the only mammals on it not introduced by humans are
subantarctic fur seals and
southern elephant seals, both of which breed on the beaches.
House mice, which most likely arrived with early sealing crews, as an example of the
island rule.
Invasive species Pearlwort (Sagina procumbens) In 1998, a number of
procumbent pearlwort (Sagina procumbens) plants were found on the island which are capable of dramatically transforming the upland plant ecosystem (as it has on the
Prince Edward Islands). Eradication efforts are ongoing but are expected to require years of 'concerted effort'. By 2010, through removing plants manually with some soil and then treating the area with boiling water, it had been restricted to one small area of coastal cliffs. As a result, the seed load had been reduced in a decade by 3 orders of magnitude. This nevertheless could result in 200 plants germinating per square metre. To reduce the population further, a study indicated that a combination of soil removal and herbicide could be effective. A report in 2020 noted that continued removal was still needed as well as biosecurity measures to avoid re-introduction.
Other non-native plants By 2020 the following non-native plants with potential to become invasive had been recorded recently on the island: purpletop vervain (
Verbena bonariensis), potato (
Solanum tuberosum), common rush (
Juncus effusus), black bent (
Agrostis gigantea), cabbage (
Brassica rapa) and Bermuda grass (
Cynodon dactylon). As of October 2018, it is estimated that as many as 2,000,000 fewer eggs and chicks are being raised due to the impact of mice on the island, threatening the extinction of several species of seabirds that breed exclusively or nearly exclusively on Gough Island. The
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) awarded £62,000 by the UK government's Overseas Territories Environment Programme to fund additional research on the Gough Island mice and a feasibility study of how best to deal with them. This grant also paid for the assessment of a
rat problem on Tristan da Cunha island. Trials for a method of eradicating the mice through baiting were commenced, and ultimately a £9.2 million eradication programme was planned, set to begin in 2020, with the island expected to be mouse-free by 2022. However, the start date was delayed until 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The programme used helicopters to drop cereal pellets containing the rodenticide
brodifacoum. Gough has also been identified as the third-most important island in the world (out of 107 islands) to be targeted for the removal of non-native invasive mammals in order to save threatened species from extinction and to make major progress towards achieving global conservation targets. The proposed cull was criticised by the director of
Animal Aid, stating, "We don't feel we have the right to choose some animals over others ... We don't agree with any culling for so-called conservation purposes. The conservation priority should be making sure wild spaces are protected, but allowing nature to do its thing." As of December 2021, the head of the project to cull the population of mice considers this to have been a failure, since a living mouse was spotted after the completion of the project, which implied that there are other mice still alive on Gough. Nevertheless, the
RSPB is planning a future restoration attempt by applying rodenticide bait, after doing some research to improve this operation. ==Weather station==