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CITY, STATE, ZIP ADDRESS NAME Island Conservation Center for Ocean Health 100 Shaffer Road Santa Cruz, CA 95060 U.S.A. JOIN US Printed on 100% recycled paper, using soy-based inks. 2 01 1 ANNUAL R E P O R T SCORE PERFORAT PERFORAT SCORE FOLD I Want to Help Protect Island Species! We are currently in the midst of a major wave of extinctions. We are losing our world’s rich diversity of life, much of it concentrated on islands, at a pace that is a thousand times greater than natural extinction rates. As we lose unique species, we lose the natural resources that are the foundation of our economies, our health, and our cultures. $1000 Yet, there is hope. With your vital support, Island Conservation works to protect native plants and animals on islands by removing invasive species, a leading cause of island extinctions. Together, we are making the difference between survival and extinction. City Enclosed is my contribution to help prevent extinctions $500 $250 $100 $ Name Street State Zip Phone E-mail An IUCN Endangered Allen’s Cay Rock Iguana, Cyclura cychlura inornata, on Allen’s Cay, Bahamas. With your support, Island Conservation and the Bahamas National Trust helped protect this threatened species. Thank you! I’d like to hear from Island Conservation more, please add me to your mailing list. Island Conservation respects your privacy; we do not sell or share your personal information with other organizations. I will make a secure online donation through the Island Conservation website: www.islandconservation.org I’d like to make a gift of stock or a legacy gift through my estate. Please contact me. Contributions to Island Conservation are tax deductible as allowed by US federal law or by Canadian federal law. FOLD SCORE ( GLUE ) PERFORATE PERFORATE SCORE PREVENTING EXTINCTIONS Dear friend, We don’t want to lose another Lonesome George. When this 100-year-old Pinta Giant Tortoise died in June 2012 in the Galápagos, his species went extinct; he was the lone survivor of his kind. Until every Critically Endangered and Endangered island species has been protected; until the islands that these unique species call home have been restored; until island communities have thriving, functioning ecosystems that support their health and economic opportunity, there will be a need for Island Conservation. In 2012, we launched the Small Islands, Big Difference campaign, an ambitious, collaborative endeavor to save our world’s most vulnerable species. Small Islands, Big Difference is built upon a scientific backbone—the Threatened Island Biodiversity database, the world’s most comprehensive hub of information about threatened island species at risk from invasive vertebrates. A collaborative effort between Island Conservation, University of California at Santa Cruz, Birdlife International, and the IUCN Invasive Species Specialist Group, the database identifies 1,300 islands—out of more than 180,000 islands around the globe—where threatened species occur, thus helping us target where we should focus our efforts to prevent extinctions. Under this new campaign, we are partnering with governments, bi-lateral and multilateral organizations such as the Convention on Biological Diversity, non-profit organizations, philanthropic individuals and organizations, and island communities to turn the tide on extinction and safeguard island ecosystems. This is a time of incredible opportunity for all of us to protect biodiversity and save native island species. Over the past 18 years, with your support, Island Conservation and our partners have protected 967 populations of 338 species on 51 islands. We know what works. Our methods, tactics, and tools are easily replicated and readily available. With the appropriate funding and commitment, we can solve this problem. If you are a government representative, an employee of a non-profit organization, or an individual passionate about islands and their native species, we invite you to join the Small Islands, Big Difference campaign. To get involved and learn more about Small Islands, Big Difference, visit www.smallislandsbigdifference.org or call us at 831-359-4787. Together, we can secure a future for all threatened island species by quickening the pace and scale of invasive species removals. Thank you for supporting Island Conservation and for your deep commitment to the survival of Earth’s varied and beautiful plants and animals. Sincerely, William Waldman Executive Director David Hartwell Board Chair TABLE OF CONTENTS 6 Palmyra Atoll, Line Islands 8 Galápagos Archipelago, Ecuador Coconut Crab, Pisonia grandis, Linking Land and Sea Galapagos Tortoise, Galapagos 12 Threatened Island Biodiversity Database Where we need to work to save species from extinction 14 Financial Report Board, Advisory Board 15 Supporters & Partners Marine Iguana, Galapagos Penguin 10 Tahanea Atoll, French Polynesia 11 Conservation Measures Thank you! Tuamotu Sandpiper Measuring impact on Rat Island, Desecheo Island, and Anacapa Island Island Conservation 100 Shaffer Road Santa Cruz, CA 95060 USA Phone +1 (831) 359-4787 www.islandconservation.org www.facebook.com/preventingextinctions www.twitter.com/noextinctions Leach’s Storm-petrel Photo © Jeremiah Trimble Remaining Photos © Island Conservation Cover Photo: Vulnerable Bristle-thighed Curlew (Numenius tahitiensis), Palmyra Atoll PALMYRA ATOLL Left: Native, Sooty Terns, Onychoprion fuscatus Center: Palmyra Landscape Right: Native, Masked Boobies, Sula dactylatra Palmyra, named for the U.S.S. Palmyra, which wrecked on the atoll’s reefs in 1802, became a National Wildlife Refuge in 2001 and today is part of the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument. Palmyra Atoll, the northernmost of the Pacific’s equatorial Line Islands, is known as one of the most idyllic and remote places in the world. Large colonies of seabird species, such as Masked Boobies, Red-footed Boobies, Sooty Terns, and Black Noddies, as well as Pacific Golden Plovers, Bristle-thighed Curlews, Wandering Tattlers, and other migratory shorebirds, depend on this tropical oasis for survival. The atoll also provides critical habitat for the world’s largest land invertebrate, the rare Coconut Crab, and features one of the best remaining examples of Pisonia grandis tropical coastal strand forest in the Pacific. Believed to have arrived on Palmyra in the 1940s, when the atoll served as a WWII refueling station, invasive black rats quickly ripped through the ecosystem, devouring seabird and shorebird eggs and chicks and Pisonia seedlings. The invasive rats likely caused the extirpation, or local extinction, of up to eight seabird species. In 2011, Island Conservation, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and The Nature Conservancy implemented a rat-removal project on Palmyra Atoll. Soon after, Pisonia seedlings began sprouting and fiddler crabs were flourishing. With the island free of invasive predators, a dramatic increase in native plant and animal species is anticipated as we continue to monitor for ecosystem changes. 6 You can follow the atoll’s recovery at: www.protectpalmyra.org An Equatorial Oasis Coconut Crab Birgus latro With a leg span of over 3 feet, a weight of up to 10 pounds, and a life expectancy of more than 70 years, the Coconut Crab (or “Robber Crab”) is the kind of creature that spawns myths. They take their name from the coconuts that they drag back to their dens, break open, and devour. Coconut Crabs continue to decline throughout their range due to loss of habitat and human consumption. Native Forest Pisonia grandis This tropical coastal strand forest was once found throughout the Indian and Pacific Oceans but is now rare. Broadleaf Pisonia trees provide critical nesting habitat for native seabird species, which prefer them over the invasive and currently dominant coconut palms. For decades, invasive rats devoured Pisonia seeds and seedlings, but now with the rats gone, this threatened tree species should experience new growth and expansion. Linking the Land and Sea Scientists studying Manta Rays around Palmyra Atoll found that the rays spend all their time off the coast of native forest, where plankton blooms are supported by the nutrient-rich runoff from frequent rainfall. Along invasive coconut palm stands, fewer nutrients and less plankton were found in the coastal waters. Additionally, native forests host five times more nesting birds than do invasive palm forests. These striking links demonstrate the vital connection between native land and sea species. 7 GALÁPAGOS Left: IUCN Endangered, Galapagos Fur Seal, Arctocephalus galapagoensis Center: Galágpagos Islands Right: IUCN Vulnerable, Galapagos Hawk, Buteo galapagoensis The Galápagos Marine Reserve is a designated World Heritage Site and the second-largest marine reserve in the world, covering 133,000 square kilometers of sea surface. The Galápagos Archipelago is one of the best studied and protected tropical island ecosystems in the world. The volcanic processes that formed the islands, together with their isolation, led to the development of an extraordinarily rich abundance of animals, many found nowhere else in the world, such as the Marine and Land Iguanas, the Galapagos Giant Tortoise, and the many species of finch that inspired Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection following his visit in 1835. But invasive rodents have invaded almost every major island in the Galápagos. Though small in size, invasive rats and mice cause the collapse of entire ecosystems as they devour bird chicks and eggs, tortoise eggs and hatchlings, lizards and iguanas, and native plants. The Galápagos National Park, assisted by Island Conservation and the Charles Darwin Foundation, is working to remove invasive rats and mice from islands in the Galápagos. In January 2011, these partners, along with Bell Laboratories, The Raptor Center of the University of Minnesota, and the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, implemented the removal of invasive rodents from the islands of Rábida, Bartolomé, Sombrero Chino, North Plaza, the two Beagle islets, and three of the Bainbridge Rocks to protect native species. Rodent removal from Pinzón and Plaza Sur is scheduled for fall 2012. 8 Wild Islands, Wild Life Galapagos Tortoise Chelonoidis nigra Reaching up to 900 pounds and over 6 feet in length, the IUCN threatened Galapagos Tortoise is the largest living tortoise species in existence and, with a lifespan of over 100 years in the wild, one of the longest-living species in the world. Its numbers have drastically declined—from 250,000 before human settlement in the 1800s to roughly 19,000 today. Only ten subspecies of the original fifteen still survive in the wild. Action must be taken to protect these remaining species, including the Pinzón Giant Tortoise (pictured), before they are lost forever like Lonesome George. Galapagos Marine Iguana Amblyrhynchus cristatus Found exclusively in the Galápagos, this IUCN threatened, endemic iguana is the world’s only lizard that dives underwater to forage on marine algae, staying underwater for up to 30 minutes. They live in coastal areas and lay their eggs underground in sand or fine gravel. Because they evolved in the absence of mammalian predators, like most island species, these iguanas are extremely vulnerable to invasive predator species, which consume young and occasionally adult iguanas. Galapagos Penguin Spheniscus mendiculus Another Galápagos endemic, the IUCN Endangered Galapagos Penguin has seen dramatic population declines since the 1970s, mainly due to El Niño Southern Oscillation events, which warm the waters of the eastern and central Pacific, but also because of introduced predators. In 2011, Island Conservation helped protect the penguin from extinction by removing invasive rodents from Bartolomé Island, where they breed. 9 TAHANEA Left: Endangered, Tuamotu Sandpiper, Prosobonia cancellata Center: Tahanea Landscape Right: French Polynesia Endemic, Atoll Fruit Dove, Ptilinopus coralensis The Tuamotu Archipelago is the largest chain of atolls in the world, spanning an area the size of Western Europe. Like many atolls in the archipelago, Tahanea is uninhabited. Once present throughout much of the Tuamotu Archipelago in French Polynesia, the Endangered Tuamotu Sandpiper has been reduced to just 1,300 individuals residing on four widely distributed atolls because invasive rats and feral cats have decimated their populations elsewhere. It’s a globally significant species as it is the last of its kind—the Tuamotu Sandpiper is the only tropical sandpiper species left. On Tahanea Atoll, part of the Tuamotu Archipelago, suitable breeding habitat for the sandpiper exists, but the population is restricted to small areas because of the presence of invasive rats. In our first project in French Polynesia, Island Conservation collaborated with Simon Fraser University, the Société d’Ornithologie de Polynésie (a Polynesian non-governmental organization), and the nearby Faaite island community to remove invasive rats from three small motu, or islands, on Tahanea Atoll in July 2011. Free from invasive rats, these islands will provide safe breeding habitat for this truly incomparable species. 10 Conservation Measures Rat Island In 2011, the University of California at Santa Cruz Conservation Measures team recorded Leach’s Storm-petrels calling on Rat Island (renamed “Hawadax Island”), Alaska, in the Aleutian archipelago. The presence of these seabirds and their calling behavior is further evidence that the island is quickly recovering following the removal of invasive rats in 2008 by Island Conservation, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and The Nature Conservancy. These exciting monitoring results build upon our 2010 findings, which documented the return of the Aleutian endemic Giant Song Sparrow and observed an increase in seabirds—successfully nesting and producing chicks—that were once highly susceptible to rat predation. Desecheo Island Before we began removing invasive species from Desecheo Island, Puerto Rico, in 2008, we started monitoring Higo Chumbo, a rare and endangered cactus that is found on only three islands in the world. In 2011, as the removal of invasive species neared completion, more than 30 cactus plants were recorded in island-wide field surveys, compared to zero found in 2008. The most recent estimate is now 54 individual cactuses thriving. With the removal project’s completion in 2012, we are now seeing consistent growth of monitored plants and, for the first time since 1994, the fruiting of plants. Anacapa Island In 2011, University of California at Santa Cruz biologists on Anacapa Island, one of California’s Channel Islands, observed an unexpected visitor—the Endangered Ashy Storm-petrel. Never before recorded on Anacapa, its presence is a true indication of ecosystem recovery following the removal of invasive rats from the island in 2002-2003 by the Channel Islands National Park, California Department of Fish and Game, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration, and Island Conservation. This conservation action immediately eliminated invasive rat predation on seabirds and their eggs. Over the last decade, nesting by rare Xantus’ Murrelets increased by 155%, bolstering survivorship and population size. Cassin’s Auklets, previously absent from Anacapa, also began breeding on the island after the removal of rats. 11 Where the wild (and endangered) things are… Mapping the globe with the Threatened Island Biodiversity database Each dot represents an island where threatened species are at risk from invasive vertebrates, with larger dots representing multiple islands in one area. Over the past 500 years, islands have suffered 80% of all recorded extinctions and invasive vertebrate species introduced to the islands are the leading cause. The Threatened Island Biodiversity database (TIB) was created to help conservationists, island practitioners, NGOs, and government agencies identify where the removal of invasive species is needed most urgently to safeguard biodiversity and human livelihoods on islands around the world. The TIB is a partnership between: http://tib.islandconservation.org 12 13 Financial Report Revenue Contributions 2011 Revenue 62,669 Grants 3,032,361 Contracts 2,742,278 Other income Total Revenue 84,916 5,922,224 Contributions Contracts Grants Other income Expenses Program services North American Region (Includes Palmyra Atoll) 2,967,555 South American Region 894,889 Caribbean Region (Includes Desecheo Island) 562,700 Southwest Pacific Region 135,406 Conservation Science 332,761 Innovation Program Small Islands Big Difference Campaign Total Program services Annual Expenses 2009 - 2011 16,460 150,227 5,059,999 Supporting services Development Management & General 326,260 577,475 2009 Total supporting services Total Expenses 5,963,734 Net assets, beginning of period 3,794,062 Net assets, end of period 2010 201 1 903,735 3,752,552 North American Region Conservation Science South American Region Innovation Program Caribbean Region Small Islands Big Difference Campaign Southwest Pacific Region Change in net assets (41,510) Board Of Directors Advisory Board Walter Sedgwick, Chair Island Foundation John Mitchell New York Botanical Garden Paul Ehrlich Stanford University Peter Raven Missouri Botanical Garden John Dawson, Vice-Chair & Treasurer Dawson Family Foundation Angus Parker ** José Sarukhán Kermez Institute of Ecology, UNAM Michael Soulé University of California, Santa Cruz Russell Mittermeier Conservation International Edward O. Wilson Harvard University Stephanie McAuliffe, Secretary The David & Lucile Packard Foundation Scott Birkey Cox, Castle & Nicholson LLP David Hartwell * Bellcomb Technologies, Inc. Jonathan Hoekstra World Wildlife Fund 14 Ingrid Parker University of California, Santa Cruz Daniel Simberloff University of Tennessee, Knoxville Mike Sweeney The Nature Conservancy Stephen Thal Harold Mooney Stanford University David Quammen Author and Journalist * Became Board Chair in 2012 ** Joined in 2012 2011 Supporters 2011 Partners Anonymous Donors Wayne Minami Stephen Aronson Martha Miniello Bahamas National Trust Mark and Leslie Beauchamp Mitsubishi Corporation Foundation for the Americas Dorothy M. Beek The Mulago Foundation Joe Beek National Fish & Wildlife Foundation Bell Laboratories, Inc. The Nature Conservancy Beneficia Foundation Newman’s Own Foundation Callum Berridge Catherine Nishida Scott Birkey Katherine and Donal O’Brien Bobolink Foundation Open Door Foundation CABI Ingrid Parker California State Coastal Conservancy Bruce Posthumus Patricia Callahan Ann E. Prezyna and Gordon Lewis Alan Carpenter Price, Postel and Parma LLP Yvon Chouinard Rhino Entertainment In Honor of Bill and Aimee Kreutzmann Cumming Foundation The David and Lucile Packard Foundation The Dawson Family Fund of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation RJM Foundation Maurice Robichaux Alfred Roca Michael and Yvonne Dixon Salesforce.com Foundation Richard Erickson Sandler Foundation Janet Eyre Walter and Jeanne Sedgwick Kathleen M. Filippo, In Memory of Guy Buckelew Daniel Simberloff David and Carol Finkelstein Larisa Stephan Solon and Diane Finkelstein Mark and Leila Sutherland Lesley Franz Michael Sweeney Melissa Greene and Don Samuel Jack and Rikki Swenson HeliGal Tetra Tech Tony Henderson Stephen Thal Jon Hoekstra and Jennifer Steele U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Derry and Charlene Kabcenell Jessica Varlet Kaho’olawe Island Reserve Commission Ambika Wauters Laurie and Eric Kutter, In Honor of Jon Hoekstra William Waldman and Olivia Millard Charles and Debra Landrey Frans Lanting and Chris Eckstrom Jennifer Lape Latham & Watkins, LLC. Leo Model Foundation The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust Llagas Foundation MacKinnon Family Charitable Foundation March Foundation Stephanie McAuliffe and Sheree Rife Paul McGlaughlin Susan McGreevy Ruth Steinberg Mary and John Wegmann William K Bowes, Jr. Foundation Margaret Willits Willow Grove Foundation Michael Owen Willson Wolf Creek Charitable Foundation American Bird Conservancy Arthur Rylah Institute AvesChile Bahamas National Trust BC Parks Bell Laboratories, Inc Biodiversity Research Institute Sandra Buckner California State Coastal Conservancy Canadian Wildlife Service Charles Darwin Foundation Consejo de Gobierno de Galápagos Conservacionistas de las Islas Juan Fernández Conservation International, Ecuador Corporación Nacional Forestal (CONAF) Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Eco Oceania Pty., Ltd EcoGene Environment Canada Fort Worth Zoo Peter Garden Galápagos’ National Park, Ecuador Groupo Ecologia de Islas Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources HeliOtago, New Zealand Institute for Wildlife Studies Instituto de Ecología y Biodiversidad, Chile Dr. John B. Iverson, Dept. of Biology, Earlham College Juan Fernandez Islands Conservancy, Oikonos Junta Parroquial “Isla Santa María”, Ecuador Kaho`olawe Island Reserve Commission Landcare Research, Inc. Mayaguez Zoo Ministerio del Medio Ambiente, Chile Municipalidad de Juan Fernández Native Range, Inc. New Zealand Dept. of Conservation – Island Eradication Advisory Group National Fish & Wildlife Foundation Oikonos Ecosystem Knowledge Oiled Wildlife Care Network Pacific Invasives Initiative Pacific Islands Partnership Palau Animal Welfare Society Palau Conservation Society Palau National Invasive Species Council Palmyra Atoll Research Consortium Parks Canada Pathfinder Aviation Phoenix Islands Protected Area Trust Powerboat Adventures PRBO Conservation Science Puerto Rico Dept. of Environment and Natural Resources Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority Puerto Rico Ornithological Society Quatsino First Nation Raptor Center, University of Minnesota Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (Henderson, Montserrat) Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero (SAG), Chile Simon Fraser University Tamarak Ventures Ltd. (R/V Aquila) The Nature Conservancy – Alaska Chapter The Nature Conservancy – Hawaii Chapter Tides Foundation Tlatlasikwala First Nation Torres Asociados LTD, Chile Universidad Católica del Norte, Chile University of California, Santa Cruz University of California, Davis US Air Force US Environmental Protection Agency US National Park Service – Channel Islands National Park US Navy USDA – APHIS, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, Fort Collins, CO USDA – APHIS, Wildlife Services, National Wildlife Research Center, Hilo, HI. USDA – Caribbean Islands office USDA – Fort Collins USFWS – Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge USFWS – Caribbean Islands National Wildlife Refuge Complex USFWS – Division of Migratory Bird Management USFWS – Ecological Services in Hawai’i USFWS – Ecological Services in the Caribbean USFWS – International Affairs USFWS – Invasive Species Program USFWS––National Wildlife Refuge System USFWS – Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument USFWS – Pacific SW Region (Region 8) USFWS – Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge USFWS – San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge Complex USFWS – SE Region (Region 4) White Buffalo, Inc. Wildlife Conservation Society, Latin America 15 ROBINSON CRUSOE ISLAND Robinson Crusoe Island, Chile. The largest island in the Juan Fernández Archipelago, Robinson Crusoe is home to the world’s only endemic hummingbird from an oceanic island—the Critically Endangered Juan Fernández Firecrown. 12 16 Save Island Species We are deeply grateful to our many supporters. Your generous tax-deductible contributions make a critical difference in protecting island species around the world. Thank you! Online Giving. Please visit our website at www. islandconservation.org. Click on the ‘Donate Now’ secure online link and make your gift via PayPal, Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express. Citizens of Canada can also make a taxdeductible donation to Island Conservation by cheque, credit card, wire, direct deposit or securities through our partners at Tides Canada Foundation. Please contact our Director of Philanthropy at (831) 359-4787 ext. 110 for details. By Mail. Please send contributions to us at: Island Conservation, 100 Shaffer Rd, Santa Cruz, CA 95060 Corporate Matching. You can double or triple your gift if you or your spouse works for a company that matches employee charitable gifts. Please request a Matching Form from your company’s Human Resources or Charitable Giving/Grants Department, fill it out and send to Island Conservation (see address above). We’ll do the rest! Gifts of Stock. Transferring stock is an excellent way to make a gift to Island Conservation. Please contact our Director of Philanthropy at (831) 359-4787 ext. 110 for details. Gifts of Property. Gifts of real estate and other tangible property are accepted. Please contact our Director of Philanthropy at (831) 359-4787 ext. 110 for details. In-Kind Gifts. In-kind contributions are welcome. Memorial or Honorary Gifts. Honor or celebrate the memory of a loved one with a gift to Island Conservation. We will send acknowledgements to the honoree or family. The amount of the gift is not included. Legacy Gifts. Help assure Island Conservation’s future by making a bequest or similar planned gift. For more information, please contact the Director of Philanthropy at (831) 359-4787 x 110. All donors, except those who wish to remain anonymous, will be acknowledged on our website and in our annual report. 17 Red-footed Boobies (Sula sula), Palmyra Atoll I Want to Help Protect Island Species! We are currently in the midst of a major wave of extinctions. We are losing our world’s rich diversity of life, much of it concentrated on islands, at a pace that is a thousand times greater than natural extinction rates. As we lose unique species, we lose the natural resources that are the foundation of our economies, our health, and our cultures. $1000 Yet, there is hope. With your vital support, Island Conservation works to protect native plants and animals on islands by removing invasive species, a leading cause of island extinctions. Together, we are making the difference between survival and extinction. City Enclosed is my contribution to help prevent extinctions $500 $250 $100 $ Name Street State Zip Phone E-mail An IUCN Endangered Allen’s Cay Rock Iguana, Cyclura cychlura inornata, on Allen’s Cay, Bahamas. With your support, Island Conservation and the Bahamas National Trust helped protect this threatened species. Thank you! I’d like to hear from Island Conservation more, please add me to your mailing list. Island Conservation respects your privacy; we do not sell or share your personal information with other organizations. I will make a secure online donation through the Island Conservation website: www.islandconservation.org I’d like to make a gift of stock or a legacy gift through my estate. Please contact me. Contributions to Island Conservation are tax deductible as allowed by US federal law or by Canadian federal law. FOLD SCORE ( GLUE ) PERFORATE PERFORATE SCORE PREVENTING EXTINCTIONS CITY, STATE, ZIP ADDRESS NAME Island Conservation Center for Ocean Health 100 Shaffer Road Santa Cruz, CA 95060 U.S.A. JOIN US Printed on 100% recycled paper, using soy-based inks. 2 01 1 ANNUAL R E P O R T SCORE PERFORAT PERFORAT SCORE FOLD