The Channel Islands form part of one of the richest marine ecosystems of the world. Many unique species of plants and animals are
endemic to the Channel Islands, including fauna such as the
Channel Islands spotted skunk,
ashy storm-petrel, and flora including a unique subspecies of
Torrey pine. File:Garibaldi, Catalina Island, Channel Islands, California.jpg|
Garibaldi, Catalina Island File:Juvenile Garibaldi.jpg|Juvenile
Garibaldi, Catalina Island File:0425 aquaimages.jpg|Diver and juvenile
sea lion, Anacapa Island File:California Moray Eel, San Clemente Island, Channel Islands, California.jpg|
California moray eel File:Kelp forest and sardines, San Clemente Island, Channel Islands, California.jpg|
Kelp forest and
sardines File:2780 aquaimages.jpg|
Giant black sea bass, San Clemente Island File:Sea Fan.jpg|
Sea fan, Anacapa Island File:Hermissenda Nudibranch, San Clemente Island, Channel Islands, California.jpg|
Hermissenda crassicornis, San Clemente Island File:Anemones.jpg|
Anemones, Catalina Island File:Bat Ray in kelp forest, San Clemente Island, Channel Islands, California.jpg|
Bat ray in
kelp forest, San Clemente Island File:Spanish Shawl nudibranch, Channel Islands, California.jpg|
Spanish shawl nudibranch File:CatalinaIslandFox.jpg|A Catalina
Island fox. Their population dwindled to 100 individuals before rebounding with the help from scientists from the
USC Wrigley Institute for Environmental Studies.
Flora Flora on the Channel Islands include a unique subspecies of pine, oak, and the
island tree mallow. Santa Rosa Island holds two groves of the
Torrey pine subspecies
Pinus torreyana var.
insularis, which is endemic to the island. Torrey pines are the United States' rarest pine species. The islands also house many rare and endangered species of plants, including the
island barberry, the
island rushrose, and the
Santa Cruz Island lace pod.
Giant kelp forests surround the islands and act as a source of nutrition and protection for other animals.
Invasive species, such as the
Australian blue gum tree,
olive tree,
sweet fennel, and
Harding grass, threaten native species through competition for light, nutrients, and water. The Australian blue gum, for example, releases toxins in its
leaf litter which prevents other species of plants from growing in the soil surrounding it. The blue gum, as well as other species including the Harding grass, are much more flammable and better adapted to
wildfires than native species.
Earthworms, thought to have come from mainland topsoil imported for road construction, are altering the unique ecosystem and
microbial communities on San Clemente Island, threatening
biodiversity. In this formerly earthworm-free region, they change the distribution of plants and vegetation, making it possible for non-native plants to invade.
Fauna The Channel Islands and the waters surrounding hold many
endemic species of animals, including fauna such as the Channel Islands spotted skunk,
island scrub jay,
ashy storm-petrel,
San Clemente loggerhead shrike, and the San Clemente sage sparrow. Two breeds of livestock, the
Santa Cruz sheep and the
San Clemente Island goat originate from here. Many species of large marine mammals, including pacific
gray whales,
blue whales,
humpback whales, and
California sea lions breed or feed close to the Channel Islands. Current occurrences of the critically endangered
North Pacific right whales and historically abundant
Steller's sea lions in these areas are unknown. Seabirds, including the
western gulls,
bald eagles,
pigeon guillemots, and
Scripps's murrelets use the islands as well for shelter and breeding grounds. The endemic
island fox is California's smallest natural canine and has rebounded from its near extinction in the late 1990s. Several endemic reptile and amphibian species including the
island fence lizard,
island night lizard, and
Channel Islands slender salamander live on the islands. During the Late Pleistocene a dwarf mammoth species, the
pygmy mammoth inhabited the northern Channel Islands, before becoming extinct around 13,000 years ago, around the time of human arrival to the Channel Islands. The Channel Islands also had a huge population of shellfish during this time that every part of utilized. The abalone was so important the native peoples started to farm abalone based to get a higher yield == Conservation ==