Daitō Islands

Daitō Islands
Native name: 大東諸島
Daitō Shotō

Nickname: Ufuagari

Map of the Daitō Islands
Daitō Islands
Geography
Coordinates 25°50′34″N 131°14′26″E / 25.84278°N 131.24056°E / 25.84278; 131.24056
Adjacent bodies of water Philippine Sea
Total islands 3
Area 44.427 km2 (17.153 sq mi)
Administration
Region Kyūshū / Ryukyu Islands
Prefecture Okinawa
District Shimajiri
Demographics
Population 2,107[1] (2010)
Pop. density 45.83 /km2 (118.7 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups Japanese

The Daitō Islands (大東諸島, Daitō-shotō) are an archipelago consisting of three isolated coral islands in the Philippine Sea southeast of Okinawa. The islands have a total area of 44.427 square kilometres (17.153 sq mi) and a population of 2,107.[1]

Administratively, the whole group belongs to Shimajiri District of Okinawa Prefecture, and is divided between the villages of Minamidaitō and Kitadaitō, with uninhabited Okidaitōjima island administered as part of Kitadaitō municipality, although physically located closer to Minamidaitōjima.

Etymology

Kita, minami, and oki means, respectively, "north", "south", and "offshore" while daitō means "great east".

History

These islands have long been known in Okinawa as Ufuagari (“the Great East”).[2][3] The islands were first sighted by the Spanish navigator Bernardo de la Torre on 25 September 1543 (Okidaitōjima) and a few days later still in September (Minamidaitōjima and Kitadaitōjima), during his abortive attempt to reach New Spain from the Philippines with the San Juan de Letran.[4] They were visited later by European explorers of various nations, and were commonly known as the Borodino Islands after a Russian vessel surveyed them in 1820.

The islands remained uninhabited until formally claimed by the Empire of Japan in 1885. In 1900, a team of pioneers from Hachijōjima, one of the Izu Islands located 287 kilometres (178 mi) south of Tokyo led by Tamaoki Han'emon (1838 1910), started a settlement on Minamidaitōjima, and began cultivating sugar cane. He subsequently led colonization efforts on Kitadaitōjima and Okidaitōjima. Those two islands had substantial deposits of guano, which was mined for phosphate-based fertilizer and gunpowder. By 1919 the population was more than 4000 people.

During World War II, Minamidaitōjima was repeatedly attacked by the United States Navy. After World War II all of the islands were occupied by the United States, and administered as part of the United States Civil Administration of the Ryukyu Islands from 1950. The islands were returned to Japan in 1972.

Islands

Photo Name Kanji Area
[km²]
Population
2004
highest point
[m]
Peak Coordinates
Minamidaitōjima 南大東島 30.57 1,442[1] 78 25°50′45″N 131°14′30″E / 25.84583°N 131.24167°E / 25.84583; 131.24167 (Minamidaitō)
Kitadaitōjima 北大東島 11.94 665[1] 75 25°57′N 131°18′E / 25.950°N 131.300°E / 25.950; 131.300 (Kitadaitō)
Okidaitōjima 沖大東島 1.15 24°28′N 131°11′E / 24.467°N 131.183°E / 24.467; 131.183 (Oki Daitō)

Ecology

Phytocoenosis on east coast of Minamidaitō Island.
Ōike pond in Minamidaitō Village.

Being separated for more than 300 km from Ryukyu Islands, the nearest landmass, an unique and isolated ecosystem holding endemic species was established on Daitō Islands which doesn't include habu vipers naturally unlike many of Ryukyu Islands.[5] Lack of snakes caused introduced and invasive toads to flourish and rampant.[6] Three main islands of Kita, Minami, and Oki were originally covered by virgin forests, however human activities including military exercise severely damaged and resulted in disappearing of forests and extinction of endemic species most notably on Okidaitōjima.[7] Aside from eels, any fresh water fish and amphibians had not been recorded in pre-exploration periods. Entire archipelago excluding Okidaitōjima and smaller islands is listed as a Wildlife Protection Areas in Japan extending for 4,251 hectare with a special protection zone of 234 hectare.

Many of flora and fauna were named after the islands including Daito fruit bat, Daito buzzard, Daito Neolitsea, Daito scops owl (listed in the natural monument of Japan),[8] Daito Stag Beetle,[9] Daito Figulus binodulus (stag beetle), Daito Euterpnosia (cicada), Daito Little grebe, Daito Bulbul, Daito Mejiro, Daito Livistona,[10] Daito Excoecaria,[11] and Daito Crepidiastrum.[12] Several of these such as Daito bush warbler, Daito varied tit, and Daito wren became extinct.

Migratory and oceanic species that breed on the islands include such as Laysan albatross,[7] Black-winged stilt,[13] tuna, skipjack tuna, Japanese Spanish mackerel, marlin, manta rays, Japanese spiny lobster, sea turtles, dolphins and Humpback whales.[14] Among Ryukyu Islands, green pheasant is only present on Daitō Islands[13] followed by corals and coral fish that are rare in the rest of the archipelago most notably Chaetodon auripes which is occasionally regarded as endemic to the islands[15] and Hemitaurichthys thompsoni was only previously recorded in Bonin Islands.[16] Black Jacks and knifejaws that have become rarer in Japanese waters still occur as well.[17]

History of the European sightings of the Daitō Islands

Further reading

References

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