African Banks


The African Banks are the uninhabited northernmost islands of the Amirante Islands, of the Outer Islands of the Republic of Seychelles, in the western Indian Ocean.

History

The islands were discovered in 1797 and named Îlots Africains by Admiral Willaumez commanding the frigate La Régénérée.
North Island had for a couple of months a guano mining camp.

Geography

The African Banks lie about 230 km west of the city of Victoria on the main Seychelles island of Mahé, close to the edge of the Amirantes Bank. The nearest island is Remire Island, lying 27 km south.
The group is a pseudo-atoll, has two small islands, which are gradually undergoing coastal erosion, and appear as just small sandstone ridges exposed only at low tide.
The underwater banks extend over north-south and east-west and occupy a total area of about. With a shallow coral ring, it appears as an incomplete atoll. To the west of the coral ring, however, it is deep.

North Island

North Island is small and flat with an area of. It has a derelict automatic lighthouse on the north point. and is occasionally visited by tourists in charter yachts. It was formed from sandstone, is almost treeless, and covered by grass and low-growing vegetation. It is significant as a nesting site for terns, the colonies of which are subject to frequent exploitation and disturbance by poachers.

South Island

South Island is a small and flat island with an area of. It lies south of North Island. It has a small ruin of a poachers hut. HMS Spitfire was wrecked on South Island on August 1801.

Flora & Fauna

The islands, with an associated tract of coastal marine habitat, form a Important Bird Area, identified as such by BirdLife International because it supports populations of black-naped and sooty terns, and brown noddies. green and hawksbill sea turtles nest there.
African Banks are surrounded by coral rim and waters rich in fish, especially mackerel, tuna and sharks.