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Set
in the largest body of water in the world, the Pacific Islands are
surrounded by an astonishing 63.8 million square miles of water. The
Pacific Islands are composed of the State of Hawai’i, the territories
of Guam and American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, the Republic of Palau, and the Federated States of Micronesia
and the Republic of the Marshall Islands. Among the most remote and
pristine of these islands, the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands include
dozens of tiny islands, atolls, and shoals and are spread over more
than 1,200 miles in the Pacific Ocean. Various forces over thousands of
years have shaped the landscape of the Pacific Ocean, which contains
more islands and reefs than all the other oceans and seas combined - an
estimated 20,000 to 30,000 - as well as the deepest trench in the world.
Nearly
the entire rim of the Pacific Ocean basin is ringed with volcanoes and
earthquake areas, which have helped to develop islands and coral reefs
that provide an incredibly diverse array of habitat types for many
species. Island habitats include rocky cliffs, rivers, wetlands, and
mountain forests. Coral reef habitats form around these islands when
free-swimming coral larvae attach to the submerged edges
of islands.
Developed coral reefs provide a dazzling underwater landscape that
hosts many types of species, including fish and sea turtles.7 Together,
this array of habitats, from underwater coral reefs, to sandy, low
lying beaches and mountain rainforests, is home to a list of species as
varied as the landscapes they inhabit.
Species that call these
habitats home include birds such as shearwaters, petrels, and boobies,
as well as fish such as sharks, bony fish, and rays.
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