

The first phase focused on the removal of black rats. This multistage project will restore the natural ecosystem, with each action building on the next. Invasive rats on Palmyra also prey upon ground-nesting and tree-nesting birds, particularly Sooty and White Terns, eating eggs and chicks. Nonnative invasive rats on Palmyra have been observed attacking and consuming land crabs and eating precious seeds and seedlings of native trees (such as the Pisonia grandis), thus limiting native tree recruitment. Rats are well known for having severe negative effects on the ecosystems they invade. Approximately 6,000 military personnel were stationed on the atoll for several years. It is believed that black rats were introduced to the atoll by the military during this time. The rocky shoreline and extensive sand flats that are exposed at Palmyra during low tide are important foraging areas for several wintering migratory shorebirds, including large numbers of rare Bristle-thighed Curlews.īeginning in 1939, Palmyra Atoll was heavily used by the Navy as a base until the end of World War II. Palmyra Atoll provides essential migratory habitat for maintaining global shorebird populations. One species of mosquito was also eradicated as a result of the project. In the absence of invasive species, scientists have documented a 5000% increase in native trees, an abundance of crabs, and an increase in seabirds. The US Fish and Wildlife Service, The Nature Conservancy, and Island Conservation removed invasive rats from the atoll in 2011 to protect native species from extinction. In particular, they predated on native tree- and burrow-nesting seabirds and contribute to reducing native canopy species cover. However, nonnative introduced black rats on Palmyra were severely affecting seabirds, native crabs, and plant populations. Palmyra is the only moist tropical atoll ecosystem in the Central Pacific whose natural resources are not being impacted by growing human populations.


Palmyra supports ten nesting seabird species, including one of the largest Red-footed Booby colonies in the world, and the largest Black Noddy colony in the Central Pacific. Many nationally and internationally threatened, endangered, and depleted species thrive at Palmyra Atoll, including sea turtles, pearl oysters, giant clams, reef sharks, coconut crabs, a large diversity of fish (at least 418 species), and marine mammals. Palmyra Atoll has one of the best remaining examples of a tropical coastal strand forest found in the Pacific and one of the last predator-dominated marine ecosystems in the world. Acteon and Gambier Archipelagos, French Polynesia.
