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Joint Nature Conservation Committee

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British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT)

 
 
Image slideshow
 

Location

The Territory is the centre of the Indian Ocean, the southernmost point of the Laccadive-Maldive-Chagos ridge, between 5-7 degrees south, lies about 1,770km east of Mahe, the main island of the Seychelles.

 

Size

An archipelago of five atolls containing 55 islands covers some 54,400 sq km of ocean. The islands have a land area of only 46 sq km and 698km of coastline. Diego Garcia, the largest and most southerly island, is 27 sq km.

 

Climate

The climate is tropical oceanic type and moderated by trade winds.

 

Topography 

The terrain is flat and low and most areas do not exceed two metres in elevation.

 

Biodiversity

With a huge network of coral reefs the Territory supports 1.5% of the total global area of reefs (JNCC, 1999). The islands also provide nesting sites for the green and hawksbill turtles, and very large numbers of seabirds.

 

Main economic activities 

There is no civilian air service. There are no economic, industrial or agricultural activities on the islands. UK and US military personnel and civilian contract employees, mostly recruited from Mauritius and the Philippines, carry out construction projects and other services in support of the US defence facility in Diego Garcia These numbered approximately 4,000 persons (2004 estimate).

 

Other information 

The isolation of the BIOT and the low level of human impact, make it ideal for the study of tropical marine ecology, undistorted by pollution.

 

Information links

 

JNCC has prepared a series of outreach materials which give a general background to climate change and includes territory specific information on climate change impacts.



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