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Turks and Caicos Islands
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Date of Submission: 27/01/2012
Criteria: (x)
Category: Natural
Submitted by:
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
State, Province or Region:
Caribbean (UK Overseas Territory)
Coordinates: N21 20 W71 10
Ref.: 5682
Description
The Turks and Caicos Islands are a group of more than 40 islands and cays. The extremely hot, dry conditions led to
natural salt production in the interior wetlands of the islands, leading to one of the first and major international salt
industries in the Americas. The smaller cays are important for breeding seabirds, and endemic reptiles, invertebrates
and plants. The wetlands are globally important for shorebirds.
The Turks and Caicos have a high number of endemic species and others of international importance, partially
dependent on the conditions created by the oldest established salt-pan development in the Caribbean. The property
has a high number of endemic species of lizards, snakes, insects and plants, showing genetic differences between
the different islands. The islands are also important as a breeding area for seabirds - one of the three most important
in the Caribbean - and is a wetland site of international importance containing a variety of marine and coastal habitat
types and complex natural transitions. There are also shallow inland ponds of various sizes linked to the sea in times
of storm and/or via subterranean channels.
Justification of Outstanding Universal Value
The islands have several species of endemic plants, reptiles, insects and birds which depend on the salt islands and
the small cays as rich feeding and nesting grounds. Iguanas and other reptiles include remnant populations on Salt
Cay and South Caicos and more robust populations on some other cays. The site is globally important as the habitat
for the most important populations in the Caribbean of several bird species, and for several species and sub-species
of threatened endemic reptiles, insects, plants and birds.
Criteria met:
(x) The islands have several species of endemic plants, reptiles, insects and birds which depend on the salt islands
and the small cays as rich feeding and nesting grounds. Iguanas and other reptiles include remnant populations on
Salt Cay and South Caicos and more robust populations on some other cays.
Statements of authenticity and/or integrity
Integrity: the site represents a complex mixture of human activities associated with salt pan construction and related
dependencies of endemic reptiles, insects, plants and birds. The proposed site is of sufficient size, and contains the
necessary habitats, to maintain a diverse fauna and viable populations.
Comparison with other similar properties
Marine salt pan ecosystems are under-represented on the World Heritage List. Peninsula Valdes (Argentina) Shark
Bay (Australia), coastal sites, have salt pan components and Wood Buffalo National Park (Canada) has freshwater
salt flats The Makgadikgadi Pans Landscape Tentative List site (Botswana) is the largest salt pan in the world but
represents a former inland sea in the world, and is supplied with fresh water, rather than a coastal marine pan
system.