Rémire
Rémire lies 245 kilometres southwest of Victoria. It is a small oval-shaped island of just 27 hectares near the eastern edge of the Amirantes Ridge about 25 kilometres south of African Banks. Northeast of the island is Rémire Reef, an oval-shaped reef system 5 kilometres long by 3 kilometres wide, much of it exposed at low tide. The origin of the name is unknown though it is shared oddly enough, by an administrative region of French Guiana in South America). The island was also given the English name Eagle after an English ship which visited in 1771.
HistoryCoppinger, visiting in 1882, found Rémire uninhabited, but ruins of a solidly built stone house in the centre of the island indicated habitation at an earlier date. Guano-mining began a short time later and was said to be intensive by 1900, with sheds, a tramway and other facilities. At this time about one third of the island had been planted with coconuts, which were doing well, together with maize and pumpkins. By 1905, the guano had been exhausted. For a time, the lease was held by Mark Veevers-Carter, who erected several new buildings including a large house built in Moorish style, a reservoir, copra drier and a turtle pen. His wife, Wendy Day Veevers-Carter, authored the book Island Home telling the story of their family life on the island. After their departure for Astove in 1968, only a caretaker was employed and then for a time the island was uninhabited.
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ConservationThe island has large numbers of seabirds, notably Lesser Noddy, Fairy Tern and Wedge-tailed Shearwater breed, although they were more numerous in the past. Sooty Terns have been wiped out by over-collection of eggs. Land birds include Madagascar Turtle Dove, for which the first written record was made in 1995 when a single bird was noted on each of two days of an ornithological visit. On the next ornithological visit in 2009, they were found to have become very common. House Sparrows were not present in 1995 but were fairly common around the settlement by 2009, probably arriving from elsewhere in the Amirantes. Madagascar Fody also breed although they were not recorded until 1967. Peacock were introduced in the early 1990s and are now breeding. Both hawksbills and green turtles nest at Rémire.
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Economic ActivitiesIDC has constructed an airstrip and operates flights periodically. Staff are engaged in limited agricultural activities. IDC operates a Guest House on Remire.
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