| Avian Demography Unit
Department of Statistical Sciences University of Cape Town |
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Seabird Islands of South AfricaGeyser Island | |
![]() Photo B.M. Dyer Geyser Island from the air. "Shark Alley" is on the left
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This tiny 3-ha island is separated from Dyer Island by a narrow channel. The island is rocky, with no vegetation at all. This island supports one of the largest Cape Fur Seal Arctocephalus pusillus colonies in the Western Cape, with an estimated 55 000 seals being based here in 2000. The seal population has increased dramatically here in recent decades. The seals attract Great White Sharks Charcharadon charcharius, and the channel between the two islands is popularly known as "Shark Alley". The best time for seeing the Great Whites in Shark Alley is during the winter months. In spite of all the seals, Geyser Island also has a few birds species - see the species list below. Competition with seals for space is a major problem for seabirds on Dyer Island. A small population of African Penguins continues to find an area in which to breed, but numbers have declined in the last decade. At least one pair of African Black Oystercatchers breeds on the island. During summer, a few Turnstones, migratory Palearctic waders which breed in the Arctic, feed along the rocky coastline. Bank Cormorants, a "Vulnerable" species, breed on sites which are generally inaccesible to seals. One such site is on top of a huge beam of wood, the keel of a ship, Prince Port, which was wrecked on the island in March 1885 - the keel can be seen in the second and fifth pictures on the left. The Prince Port is one of eight shipwrecks on this tiny island. Geyser Island is a nature reserve of the Western Cape Nature Conservation Board. It has no visitor access facilities. Wilfred Chivell (popcorn@hermanus.co.za, 082 801 8014) operates boat trips to Shark Alley to view the seals, and various operators provide shark-viewing opportunities, including cage-diving. Landing on Geyser Island is hazardous, requiring a carefully-timed leap onto mussel and barnacle encrusted rocks, in between wave surges. Once on the island, one needs to steer clear of the seals, which panic readily. Bird List for Geyser Island
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