San Pedro Nolasco Island

Coordinates: 27°57′59″N 111°22′42″W / 27.96639°N 111.37833°W / 27.96639; -111.37833

San Pedro Nolasco
Native name: <span class="nickname" ">Spanish: Isla San Pedro Nolasco

Islands in the northern Gulf of California
San Pedro Nolasco Island (Mexico)
San Pedro Nolasco Island
Geography
Location Gulf of California
Coordinates 27°57′59″N 111°22′42″W / 27.96639°N 111.37833°W / 27.96639; -111.37833
Highest point 1075 feet(327.66 meters)
Country
Mexico
State Sonora

San Pedro Nolasco Island, sometimes called Seal Island, is a small and rugged Mexican island in the Gulf of California. It is 4.2 km long by 1 km wide, and lies 15 km from the nearest point of the Mexican coast and about 28 km west of the resort town of San Carlos on the coast of the Sonoran Desert. The island is protected as a nature reserve and its coastal waters are well known as a sport fishing and diving site.[1]

Flora and fauna

The island is home to an endemic cactus Echinocereus websterianus.[2] Endemic fauna include the San Pedro Nolasco Island spinytail iguana Ctenosaura nolascenensis and, formerly, Pemberton's deer mouse (Peromyscus pembertoni), a rodent which is now extinct. Large numbers of California sea lions frequent its surrounding waters and use the island as a haul-out.

Sea lions playing at North Point dive site
Passer angelfish (juvenile) in natural habitat. Lighthouse dive site
Passer angelfish (adult)

Popular dive sites

Divemaster map San Pedro Nolasco Island overview
Diver Samantha Scherrer finds an oyster shell at The Boulders site

Magdalena Bay

Magdalena Bay is a beautiful little protected cove on the southeast corner of the island. The water depths inside the bay are shallow, making it an excellent site for novice divers and snorkelers. Consistent water clarity and amazing bio-diversity offers even the most advanced divers an unforgettable experience. The gravel beach seems to be a favorite resting place with the sea lions. Large numbers of sea lion pups, guarded by a dominate male can be observed during the summer months.

Giant hawkfish at Magdalena Bay
Sea lion bull at Magdalena Bay
Octopus at Magdalena Bay

Lighthouse

Reef fish at Lighthouse site
Cortez damselfish at Lighthouse site
Starfish at Lighthouse site

The Little Waterfall

The Cave

The Beach

La Lobera

North Point

Spiney lobsters on the wall at North Point

The Window

Pelican Point

The Cavern

The Rookery

South Point

Transportation and island access

Arrangements for transportation to and from San Pedro Nolasco Island can be made through numerous charter boat operators and dive shops in nearby San Carlos. However, to go ashore at San Pedro Nolasco as well as most of the Islands in the Gulf of California (Sea of Cortez) a special permit must be purchased from the Mexican government. Such permits can be obtained at the local offices of the National Commission of Protected Natural Areas (Comision Nacional de Areas Naturales Protegidas).

References

  1. "Isla San Pedro Nolasco". SeaSanCarlos. See the Seas. 2010-10-11. Retrieved 2011-03-21.
  2. Faucon, Philippe. "Echinocereus websterianus". SeaSanCarlos. Desert Tropicals. Retrieved 2011-03-21.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, November 20, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.