East China Sea: How an uninhabited island chain splits Japan and China – CNN

Tensions have flashed numerous times over the Senkaku Islands, which China calls Diaoyu Islands, including face-offs between Japanese and Chinese warplanes and ships.

China says its claim to the islands extend back to 1400s, when it was used as a staging point for Chinese fisherman.

However, Japan says it saw no trace of Chinese control of the islands in an 1885 survey, so it formally recognized them as Japanese sovereign territory in 1895.

The islands were administered by the US occupation force after the war. But in 1972, Washington returned them to Japan as part of its withdrawal from Okinawa.

Taiwan, which Beijing regards as a breakaway province, also claims ownership of the chain.

The most recent round of tensions was lit in 2012, when Japan nationalized the islands to ward off a planned sale to Tokyo's then-governor, a hardline nationalist apparently hoping to develop the islands.

The plan sparked massive anti-Japanese protests across China.

In 2013, China declared a formal Air Defense Identification Zone covering airspace over the islands and overlapping with airspace claimed by Japan. The ADIZ declaration required airlines flying over the waters to first notify China.

The discovery of potential oil, natural gas and methane hydrate deposits in the area has added impetus to the dispute, says Carl Schuster, a professor at Hawaii Pacific University and former director of operations at the US Pacific Command's Joint Intelligence Center.

According to a 2016 report by the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, China has at least 12 operational drilling rigs.

It added that Japanese defense officials fear that China might make military modifications to the rigs but concluded it was unclear whether China intends to use the rigs for civilian-military use.

The islands are also close to strategically important shipping lanes and fertile fishing grounds.

Since 2012, Chinese Coast Guard vessels and fishing boats have begun to ply the waters in growing numbers and have been accused of bullying Japan's fishermen over the last two years, says Schuster.

"Their Coast Guard vessels are larger than Japan's and, in some cases, better armed albeit with defensive weapons only," Schuster says.

What's more, he says, "a portion of China's fishing fleet is a paramilitary organization called the People's Maritime Militia. They have better communications gear than a standard fishing craft and their crews are armed and receive military training. "

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Obama is kitesurfing in Virgin Islands on post-presidency vacation, see pics – Hindustan Times

Former President Barack Obama, and his wife, Michelle, have spent some time vacationing with Richard Branson since leaving the White House.

Obama has been enjoying life after the US presidency by trying out watersports on a luxury Caribbean island owned the British billionaire.

Former US president Barack Obama tries his hand at kite surfing during a holiday with British businessman Richard Branson on his island Moskito, in the British Virgin Islands on February 7. (REUTERS)

Richard Branson said Barack Obama had been stopped by his security detail from doing watersports during his presidency. (REUTERS)

The Virgin Group founder put up a blog post with pictures and video of the ex-president kitesurfing off one of Bransons private islands in the British Virgin Islands.

Being the former president of America, there was lots of security around, but Barack was able to really relax and get into it, the British billionaire wrote.

Branson says after spending a couple days learning to kitesurf, Obama bested the billionaire in a watersport challenge. He says inviting the Obamas to his island was a huge honor. (REUTERS)

Former US President Barack Obama and British businessman Richard Branson sit on a boat during Obama's holiday on Branson's Moskito island, in the British Virgin Islands. (REUTERS)

Obama spent his first days after leaving Washington vacationing in Palm Springs, California

Last week, pictures of Barack Obama accompanied by former first lady Michelle Obama surfaced on the internet.

Seeing former POTUS on vacation mode, wearing a backwards cap and flip-flop, set Twitter abuzz.

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Obama is kitesurfing in Virgin Islands on post-presidency vacation, see pics - Hindustan Times

US Virgin Islands, Dominica And Guadeloupe Among Routes To Be Cut By Liat – VI Consortium (press release)

ST. CROIX Liat, the Antigua-based Caribbean airline company announced on Tuesday that come March, its flights to and from the U.S. Virgin Islands will no longer be available, as well as flights between Guadeloupe and Dominica.

According to the company, the decision to suspend operation of the mentioned routes was made to achieve greater profitability and improve efficiency.

The St. Croix flights will stop on March 1, while the St. Thomas flights end March 14, according to Liat. The Dominica/Guadeloupe route will stop on March 2.

These moves are intended to help stabilize the airlines flight schedule and network, the company said.

The action follows a company-wide review of operations, with an end goal of ensuring that Liat only operate in commercially viable routes. Liat Chief Commercial Officer Lloyd Carswell said the change means more time added to schedules at airports throughout the region, while eliminating the underperforming routes.

While Liat left little hope for reinstating its St. Croix flights, Mr. Carswell said once the company makes up for its losses in the axed routes, it may consider flights to St. Thomas on a seasonal basis.

Liats next meeting with regional trade unions and the companys management happens on Friday. Among topics to be discussed is the airlines plan to reorganize routes of operation in its bid to maximize profits.

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US Virgin Islands, Dominica And Guadeloupe Among Routes To Be Cut By Liat - VI Consortium (press release)

Islands see population jumps and dips – Gulf Islands Driftwood

By Gail Sjuberg on February 8, 2017

With the first batch of 2016 census data released today, population trends for the Gulf Islands are revealed.

On Salt Spring Island, the year-round population jumped to 10,557, up from 10,234 in 2011, for a 3.2 per cent increase. Thats a slower rate of growth than seen from 2006 to 2011, when the population grew by 6.2 per cent.

South Pender Island had the biggest growth spurt among the islands, adding 34 residents to hit the 235 mark for a 16.9 per cent hike.

Saturna Island took second spot in growth percentage, at 5.7 per cent, as its population reached 354, up from 335 in 2011.

North Penders population added 28 individuals to reach 2,067. That number represents a 1.6 per cent growth rate.

Galiano and Mayne islands both saw a drop in population, continuing a trend that began with the 2011 census.

The 2016 count found 1,044 residents on Galiano, down from 1,138 an 8.3 per cent drop. In 2006, the census counted 1,258 Galiano residents.

Mayne Islands year-round population is now pegged at 949, an 11.4 per cent reductionfrom the 2011 number of 1,071.

The Galiano-Mayne losses contrasted dramatically with the 2006 census, which recorded a 26 per cent growth rate between 2001 and 2006 on Mayne Island and 17.5 per cent on Galiano.

Posted in News | Tagged 2016 census, Galiano Island, Mayne Island, North Pender Island, Salt Spring Island, Saturna Island, South Pender Island |

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Obama Kite Surfs With Richard Branson in Virgin Islands Holiday – NBCNews.com

Jack Brockway / Virgin.com

Ever the competitors, Obama and Branson threw down the gauntlet the ex-president would learn to kite surf and mogul would master the foilboard (a surfboard with a hydrofoil that allows riders to glide over the water).

"We agreed to have a final-day battle to see who could stay up the longest," Branson wrote.

Branson admitted they both struggled to get the hang of their respective sports. And on the appointed day, the adventurous Brit said he was feeling good when he managed to ride his foilboard for about 50 meters, some three feet above the water.

"I was feeling very pleased with myself, only to look over and see Barack go 100 meters on his kiteboard!" Branson wrote. "I had to doff my cap to him and celebrate his victory."

PHOTOS -

Jack Brockway / Virgin.com

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China Just Buzzed A Bunch Of Japanese Islands That The US May Be Forced To Defend – Jalopnik

Japanese Coast Guard members, photo credit: AP

Three Chinese Coast Guard ships encroached into waters right near the Japanese-controlled Senkaku Islands yesterday, reports CNN. The Japanese Coast Guard says yesterdays incursion is Chinas fourth this year, which puts everyone right on pace to match 2016, in which 36 incidents took place. Mondays maritime jostle was just one of many face offs between the two regional powers over the chain of islands China claims are its territory.

Most media attention has focused on Chinas activities in the South China Sea, but the Senkaku Islands are arguably more contentious because the United States may or may not be forced to protect them under the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty, depending on who may or may not be the American President at any particular moment.

U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis said that Article 5 of the treaty, which allows for the use of military force, covers the islands, during a press conference with Japanese Defense Minister Tomomi Inada on Saturday. Mattis words are consistent with former president Barack Obamas commitment to Article 5 during his visit to Japan in 2014.

The Japan Times reported in December that Tokyo will spend 27 percent of its Coast Guard budget to increase patrols around the Senkaku Islandwhich are also disputed by Taiwanin response to Chinas moves.

The Senkaku Islandsalso known as the Diaoyu Islands in China or the Diaoyutai Islands in Taiwanare a disputed little slice of the Pacific Ocean. Not much more than a couple of uninhabited rocks, they were mostly used as navigational markers in the past. Annexed by Japan in 1895, they were controlled by the United States after World War II, until the U.S. withdrew in the early 1970s.

Complicating matters further, both China and Taiwan agree that the islands are part of Taiwan, though neither of them agree on what Taiwan is exactly.

How does the Trump administration view whats going on? Secretary of State Rex Tillersonsaid during his confirmation hearing last month that the U.S. may bar China from accessing its own artificially-build islands. And top White House aide Steve Bannon has long predicted a war between the U.S. and China, as we previously reported.

Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi rebuffed Bannons comments today, saying neither side would benefit from an armed conflict, according to the Guardian:

Any sober-minded politician, they clearly recognize that there cannot be conflict between China and the United States because both will lose, and both sides cannot afford that.

The real question now is how the U.S. will respond to Chinas persistent incursions. For now, the answer appears to be it wont.

For example, an international tribunal in the Hague ruled last summer that China built an artificial island that was inside of Philippine waters. Beijing, which did not participate in the proceedings, said it would not honor the ruling.

The U.S. has a defense pact with the Philippines, too. So much for that.

Instead of the Trump administration ratcheting up calls for an armed conflict, which would benefit no one, one option might be for the U.S. to start sanctioning Beijing for its actions.

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-Fla) introduced a bill last month that would sanction China over its maritime behavior. Here is what the bill would do, per his press release:

Require the president to impose sanctions and prohibit visas for Chinese individuals and entities who contribute to construction or development projects, and those who threaten the peace, security or stability of the South China Sea (SCS) or East China Sea (ECS);

Impose sanctions on foreign financial institutions that knowingly conduct or facilitate a significant financial transaction for sanctioned individuals and entities if China takes certain actions in the SCS or ECS, including declaring an air defense identification zone or increasing activities at Scarborough Shoal;

Mandate a report on individuals and entities involved in sanctionable activities, including some employees of certain Chinese companies;

Prohibit the publication of documents portraying the SCS or the ECS as part of China, investments in the SCS or the ECS, and the recognition of the annexation of the SCS or the ECS; and

Restrict foreign assistance to countries that recognize Chinas sovereignty in the SCS or the ECS.

The sanctions listed above would be a significant first step in challenging China over its maritime incursions, and would certainly get Beijings attention. Any actions against China should be measured and have a specific purpose, as were Obamas sanctions against the Kremlin over its annexation of Crimea and support of rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Ngo Di Lan and Truong-Minh Vu wrote in a paper published at the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative that the aim should be to hit back with proportional actions that force Beijing to reconsider its next move:

The U.S. retaliatory response to a Chinese action should be discrete, meaning a single, independent action that can be unilaterally or multilaterally carried out at will. A clear example was the sending of two B-52s to contest Chinas announcement of an air defense identification zone over the East China Sea in 2013.

It should be targeted instead of indiscriminate. This is important because it limits the risk of large-scale Chinese retaliations. At the same time, ensuring that U.S. actions are only aimed at those actively and directly engaged seeking to change the status quo in the South China Sea bolsters the legitimacy of the U.S. response. For instance, instead of imposing sweeping economic sanctions on China, the United States should respond to Chinas land reclamation by sanctioning companies involved in the process, such as the China Communications Construction Company Dredging firm.

The response should also be proportionate, in that its intensity should roughly match that of the Chinese act. This limits the risk of escalatory response while allowing the costs that China would have to suffer to vary according to its own actions.

And lastly, U.S response should be carried out immediately after a Chinese escalatory action to show that there is a cost to every misbehavior, as well as to negate any potential benefits that China could reap from its action. For instance, if China deploys surface to air missiles on its features in the Spratlys, the United States should help Vietnam and the Philippines acquire assets specifically designed to counteract those Chinese capabilities.

To stop China from continuing to change the status quo in the South China Sea and militarize the dispute, the United States must be able to deter effectively. And ultimately, the greatest value of flexible response lies in its ability to send an unambiguous deterrence signal to China. As long as U.S. responses rely on actions with a primary purpose other than deterrence, such as joint exercises and freedom of navigation operations, it is not able to send a message of resolve to China because it suggests Washington is not ready to bear the costs of directly confronting Chinas actions.

Comparatively, the Trump administration has yet to outline a clear China policy that doesnt go beyond sound bites. Pontificating about war with China over the airwaves of Breitbart or recklessly calling for a trade war with China isnt policy. Its bluster.

Based on Chinas consistent violation of its neighbors maritime sovereignty, there are strong arguments for America to honor its defense commitments to its allies in Asia. But its very unwise to respond with using the word war in any context.

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China Just Buzzed A Bunch Of Japanese Islands That The US May Be Forced To Defend - Jalopnik

New Mix: Future Islands, The Black Angels, Jacaszek, More – NPR

Clockwise from upper left: Future Islands, Charly Bliss, The Black Angels, David Bazan Courtesy of the artists hide caption

It's starting to feel like every show this year is going to have music inspired or shaped in some way by social and political unrest. This week, that means a dark and gritty new cut about greed and corruption from The Black Angels, and singer David Bazan's (relatively) uplifting plea for empathy in his new song, "Care."

But we've also got plenty of other music to lift you up, including the wistful but celebratory new song from Future Islands called "Ran," and an epic, shape-shifting rock cut from the Athens, Ga. band Oak House. NPR Music's Lars Gotrich and Marissa Lorusso stop by the studio to turn us on to a couple of their favorite new discoveries, including some pure pop joy from a New York group called Charly Bliss, and the Japanese experimental psych-rock band Sundays & Cybele.

Bob also shares some arresting ear-candy from the Polish composer Jacaszek and the English singer-songwriter Johnny Flynn.

But we begin the show with some good news: "When the sun dies, the charred, lifeless remains of Earth will leave no evidence that humanity ever existed at all!"

Robin Hilton

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New Mix: Future Islands, The Black Angels, Jacaszek, More - NPR

Forest ‘islands’ offer refuge to wintering birds – Phys.Org

February 7, 2017 by Kelly April Tyrrell UW-Madison researchers studying forest microclimates show that these refuges may mean the difference between life and death for chickadees and their overwintering songbird kin. Credit: Jim Bauer

The polar vortex of 2013 and 2014 brought the coldest winter many parts of the Midwest had experienced in decades. In Dane County, Wisconsin, it was the coldest it had been in 35 years.

By coincidence, that same winter, University of WisconsinMadison graduate student Christopher Latimer was gathering data in fragments of forests and woodlots throughout the county. He wanted to know whether these forest "islands" created their own unique climatesmicroclimatesand what that could mean for overwintering birds like the black-capped chickadee.

In a recent study in the journal Ecography, Latimer and his co-author and advisor, UWMadison forest and wildlife ecology Professor Ben Zuckerberg, show that these forest refuges may mean the difference between life and death for chickadees and their overwintering songbird kin.

"All our predictions about climate change, from shifting temperatures to altered precipitation, play out over small-scale differences in microclimate, and they can be just as big as global climate," Zuckerberg says.

For example, Latimer and Zuckerberg found the microclimate variability was so high within the 30-mile study areawhich they call the "fragmentation gradient" in recognition of the mosaic nature of wooded areas in Dane Countythat a bird living in one part of the study area might experience a climate similar to Chicago while another might experience conditions more like those found in MinneapolisSaint Paul, 400 miles to the northwest.

Overall, they found that forests at slightly higher elevations, with more trees, and those closer to urban centers, provide warmer conditions for birds trying to survive frigid winters in southern Wisconsin. This is important, Latimer and Zuckerberg say, because chickadees must double the amount of energy they expend to keep warm when temperatures dip below minus 18 degrees Celsius or about zero degrees Fahrenheit.

Zuckerberg says the study results may help land managers prioritize conservation efforts that protect and create more forested habitat, particularly as more southerly bird species migrate northward in a warming climate.

To gather data, Latimer placed 68 devices that measure and record both light and temperature in 12 forested woodlots throughout Dane County. He hung the sensors from trees, about 1.5 meters from the ground, randomly located throughout the woods so they were at varying distances from the forest edges. Between December 2013 and February 2014, the sensors collected data every 30 minutes.

The Wisconsin researchers also assessed the vegetation within each woodlot because how much lightand therefore energy in the form of solar radiationthe forest holds via vegetation each day and releases each night might influence temperature. They estimated the density of the trees, measured tree width around each sensor, and calculated how far each sensor was from the edge of the woods. The team also measured relative elevation of the woodlot compared to a point just beyond it, the size of each forest patch, and also the distance to the nearest urban center.

Using satellite imagery, Latimer also determined the characteristics of the landscape surrounding each woodlot, calculating the percentage of agricultural land, forest and impervious surfacesidewalks, parking lots, roads and other asphalt or concrete features.

"When we talk about climate change we tend to think of climate in the absence of land use," Latimer says. "But the landscape has an influence on the magnitude of the climate effect and can exacerbate or mitigate it, impacting the spatial and temporal refuges available to certain species."

The researchers also compared their data to those gathered at local weather stations and predicted by accepted models. Weather stations are often located in open, flat regions and do not necessarily capture what's happening on a smaller scale in more wooded areas.

"We wanted to know how well current methods are capturing local conditions," says Latimer. "More than half of terrestrial biota (life) lives under forest canopies, and standard weather stations are not good at capturing below the canopy."

The study revealed that temperatures within the forest fragments were consistently warmer than climate models indicated and thus are not reflecting microclimates that are biologically significant to some species. Chickadees could experience a 40 percent reduction in survival in months with five or more days below minus 18 degrees Celsius, their energy-for-survival temperature threshold. While weather stations recorded 55 cumulative days below that temperature during the study period, the forest island sensors measured just 32 such days.

Forest fragments closer to urban centers were also found to be warmer, likely due to the urban heat island effect. Full of concrete and asphalt, temperatures in cities are often higher than in their nonurban, more vegetated counterparts. This, Latimer and Zuckerberg say, means having natural areas within and close to cities can provide "stepping stones" for southerly, less-cold-adapted birds surviving the winter months.

The researchers were most surprised to find that woodlots at higher elevations were warmer, which they say is likely due to a phenomenon called cold pooling, in which cooler air settles in lower-lying areas.

An example of this, Latimer says, can be seen in early spring on golf courses. The grass may be bare but there is still snow in sand traps because the cold air collects in the concavity.

Altogether, the study shows that forests matter for species seeking refuge from harsh climates. Fragmented forests, however, are less effective at dampening climate extremes, Latimer and Zuckerberg say, because they leak energy from their edges into the surrounding landscapes. This could intensify the energy costs for chickadees and other wintering species.

With the new data, "land managers can monitor for certain species in terms of microclimate management," says Zuckerberg, "and work to have less fragmentation, different vegetation, or locate refugia or parks in places that promote species survival."

Explore further: Climate change alters cast of winter birds

Over the past two decades, the resident communities of birds that attend eastern North America's backyard bird feeders in winter have quietly been remade, most likely as a result of a warming climate.

As Dane County begins the long slide into winter and the days become frostier this fall, three spots stake their claim as the chilliest in the area.

The soaring canopy and dense understory of an old-growth forest could provide a buffer for plants and animals in a warming world, according to a study from Oregon State University published today in Science Advances.

Research stemming from the EU-funded TERRAGEN project has found that forest fragmentation has prompted a decline in species sensitive to changes in light, moisture and temperature.

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Changes in climate and land use are expected to reduce the livable area for tropical frogs because these species will increasingly encounter temperatures hot enough to harm their behavior, reproduction and physiology. Climate ...

A new Duke University study has found high levels of selenium in fish in three North Carolina lakes receiving power plants' coal ash waste.

Another round of bickering is boiling over about temperature readings used in a 2015 study to show how the planet is warming.

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Three new minerals discovered by a Michigan Tech alumnus are secondary crusts found in old uranium mines. They're bright, yellow and hard to find.

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Forest 'islands' offer refuge to wintering birds - Phys.Org

Leeward Islands, Trinidad & Tobago move closer to Regional … – ESPNcricinfo.com

Regional Super50 2017, Group A February 6, 2017

ESPNcricinfo staff

Leeward Islands moved a step closer to clinching a spot in the semi-finals of the Regional Super50 with an eight-wicket win over West Indies Under-19 at North Sound on Monday. West Indies Under-19 were bowled out for 78 in 45.3 overs, 20 of which were maidens, after being sent in before Montcin Hodge and Jahmar Hamilton's unbeaten 72-run third-wicket stand clinched victory with one ball left in the 17th over.

Left-arm spinner Akeal Hosein did most of the damage with the ball for Leewards, finishing with figures of 4 for 8 in ten overs with five maidens. Fast bowler Alzarri Joseph plucked out the first two wickets, getting Shian Brathwaite and Emmanuel Stewart caught behind to make it 13 for 2. Hosein then ripped through the middle order to claim the next four wickets to make it 34 for 6. Captain Kirstan Kallicharan accounted for nearly half of West Indies Under-19's runs, scoring 33 at No. 6 before he was ninth out to left-arm spinner Jason Campbell with the score on 78 and Campbell cleaned up the tail for the last wicket with nothing added to the total.

Monday's results meant that West Indies Under-19 are the first team eliminated from semi-finals contention in either group. Leewards can clinch a semi-finals spot with a win in either of their final two group games against Trinidad & Tobago or Windward Islands. They can also qualify if Kent lose any of its final three group games against Trinidad & Tobago, Windward Islands or West Indies Under-19.

Trinidad & Tobago created an eight-point cushion over Kent for second place on the Group A table with a 32-run win over Windward Islands at Coolidge. Despite a 104-run opening stand between Evin Lewis and Kyle Hope, Windwards held T & T to 214 after sending them in, but could only manage 182 in reply.

Lewis propelled T&T early by dominating the opening stand with Hope, scoring 75 off 69 balls with 11 boundaries. Hope (29) and Nicholas Alexis (46) combined for another 75 as the top three accounted for the bulk of T&T's total. Denesh Ramdin was the only other batsman to reach double-figures, making 22 before he was dismissed by Kesrick Williams at the end of the 43rd over to make it 180 for 4. His wicket sparked a rapid collapse as T&T lost their last seven wickets for just 34 runs and they couldn't last all 50 overs, bowled out in 47.5 as Williams, Shane Shillingford and Kavem Hodge took three wickets apiece.

Man of the Match Shannon Gabriel helped pin down Windwards' reply, taking two wickets with the new ball while Rayad Emrit and Khary Pierre struck once each in the space of three balls to make it 43 for 4 in the 15th over. Sunil Ambris resuscitated the chase, continuing his superb tournament with his fifth half-century in six matches. Ambris added 58 with Hodge (27) and another 50 with captain Liam Sebastien.

Gabriel though struck a controversial blow two balls into the 41st, claiming Sebastien leg-before, playing back to a good length ball which replays showed had pitched six inches outside leg stump to the left-handed Sebastien with Gabriel bowling over the wicket. With the tail exposed, Gabriel and Ravi Rampaul brought a swift end to play. Kyle Mayers fished an edge-behind off Rampaul for the seventh wicket before a pair of catches on the boundary by Alexis put T&T one away from victory which Gabriel sealed by bowling Williams with a full and straight ball two deliveries into the 47th, leaving Ambris stranded on 75. Gabriel's 5 for 33 was his maiden five-for in List A cricket and he did it in just 50 balls delivered.

A win for Trinidad & Tobago over Kent in their next match would clinch semi-final spots for both T & T and Leewards. Windwards are still mathematically alive, but need a pair of bonus point wins over Leeward Islands and Kent in their final two games, combined with three losses by Trinidad & Tobago and another Kent loss to West Indies Under-19.

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South Pacific Islands Say "No Thanks" To Western Junk Food – Co.Exist

Torba Province, a collection of islands in the remote South Pacific nation of Vanuatu, has banned junk food. Western junk food, to be precise. Instead of leaning on unhealthy imports like candy, cookies, and rice, the islands will sustain themselves solely with their homegrown crops, and aim to become Vanuatu's first fully organic province by 2020.

"We are Vanuatus most isolated province and so far our health has stayed pretty good because of that, but we want to continue to be healthy," community leader and tourism boss Father Luc Dini told The Guardian. Torba is the northernmost province of Vanuatu, and its remote location has somewhat protected it from the ingress of junk. Dini added that other islands have adopted western diets and are suffering because of it: They have rotten teeth from the all the sugar, for example. "We dont want that to happen here and we dont want to develop the illnesses that come with a western junk food diet," Dini said.

Torba's population of 10,000 is mostly made up of subsistence farmers. Local foods include fish, crabs, shellfish, taro, yams, paw paw, and pineapple, according to The Guardian, which makes you wonder why the islanders would want to import the rice, candy, and canned fish that Dini says are ruining their health.

Mostly, it seems, the attraction to junk food has been convenience. Rice and noodles can just be tossed in a pot of boiling water and the work is done. "But they have almost no nutritional value and there is no need to eat imported food when we have so much local food grown organically on our islands," Dini said in The Guardian.

The islands' local chefs are on board with the plan, and as the first phase rolls out this week, touristic bungalowsthatched-roof huts that stand on stilts at the ocean's edgewill begin serving only locally-grown food. Legislation introduced over the next two years will ban all imported foods, though the jury remains out on how the laws will affect alcohol imports.

It's a noble goal, and one could have a measurable impact on locals' health. The promise of eating only local, organic food is also sure to attract a certain variety of mindful tourist, which isn't necessarily a bad thing: As travel becomes easier and the need for cross-cultural understanding grows more apparent, legislating an appreciation for local food is both a smart tourism move and a way for Torba to preserve its identity and culture.

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Chinese ships sail near disputed Japanese islands – CNN

Japan controls the chain and calls them the Senkaku Islands, while China calls them the Diaoyu Islands.

According to Japanese broadcaster NHK, protests were lodged with the Chinese Embassy in Tokyo and in Beijing through the Japanese Embassy.

China's State Oceanic Administration, which oversees the country's Coast Guard, put out a statement late Monday saying the three ships "cruised within China's Diaoyu Islands territorial sea."

China's Defense Ministry, which is separate from the Oceanic Administration, posted a statement on its website confirming the Coast Guard ship movement.

Japan's Coast Guard said the Chinese vessels spent two hours in Japanese territorial waters.

It was the fourth time Chinese ships have entered Japan's waters this year, the Japanese Coast Guard said. There were 36 such incidents in 2016, it said.

"I made clear that our long-standing policy on the Senkaku Islands stands -- the US will continue to recognize Japanese administration of the islands and as such Article 5 of the US-Japan Security Treaty applies," Mattis said in a press conference with Japanese Defense Minister Tomomi Inada.

China responded quickly on Saturday to the US stance on the islands, saying it brings instability to the region.

"Diaoyu and its affiliated islands have been Chinese territory since ancient times. These are historical facts that cannot be changed. The so-called US-Japan security treaty was a product of the Cold War, and it should not harm China's territorial sovereignty and legitimate rights," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said in a statement.

"We urge the US side to adopt a responsible attitude and stop making wrong remarks on the issue of the sovereignty of Diaoyu Islands," Lu said.

The US commitment to the Senkaus, which Mattis also reaffirmed in a Friday night meeting with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, is not new. In 2014, the Obama administration also said the remote chain fell under the treaty.

In late 2013, Chinadeclared an air defense identification zone (ADIZ) over much of the East China Sea, including the Senkakus, despite objections from Tokyo and Washington.

Japan also has an ADIZ over the islands. Although the Senkakus are uninhabited, their ownership would allow for exclusive oil, mineral and fishing rights in the surrounding waters.

While the Senkakus remain a source of friction in the US-China relationship, Mattis' visit seemed to have soothed relations a bit in another area, the South China Sea.

Although the US defense chief said "China has shredded the trust of nations in the region" by fortifying disputed South China Sea islands, Mattis also said no increased US military maneuvers there were needed.

Lu, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, on Monday welcomed that stance.

"As for Mattis' comment that there is no need for large-scale military operations in the area and the issue should be resolved through diplomacy, these remarks deserve our affirmation," Lu said.

CNN's Yuli Yang, Steven Jiang and Yoko Wakatsuki contributed to this report.

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Chinese ships sail near disputed Japanese islands - CNN

Russian millionaire details plans for new Romanov empire on Pacific islands – The Guardian

Russian businessman Anton Bakov (left) and Kiribatian MP Emil Schutz in Kiribati. Photograph: Maria Bakov

A Russian millionaire is in advanced talks with the Kiribati government to lease three uninhabited islands and establish an alternative Russia and revive the monarchy.

Russian Anton Bakov and his wife Maria are planning to re-establish the Romanov Empire on three remote islands in the south Pacific nation of Kiribati, and invest hundreds of millions of dollars into the impoverished islands economy.

The Russian monarchy was overthrown by the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 and Bakov, a businessman and former Russian MP, has devoted himself to reviving it which over the years has included exploring options for a base in Montenegro and the Cook Islands.

Bakov has now proposed leasing the uninhabited islands of Malden, Starbuck and Millennium to use as a base for his alternative Russia, as well as building infrastructure for tourists and businesses.

According to Bakov and the Kiribati government, the three islands are completely uninhabited and undeveloped and Bakovs offer is the largest investment ever considered by the island nation.

We were drawn to Kiribati due to the wonderful climate, big and spacious uninhabited islands and small population, which would obviously benefit from our financial assistance said Bakov by email.

Bakovs son Mikhail first approached the Kiribati government in late 2015 with his fathers investment plan.

After meeting with the Bakovs earlier this year the President of Kiribati, Taneti Mamau, set out with a number of government ministers to inspect the three islands in person.

The round-trip was expected to take up to a month and a decision on whether to proceed with the deal would be made on the presidents return near the end of February.

We are planning to construct air and sea ports, solar power stations, freshwater plants, hospitals, schools and settlements for the employees, said Bakov.

The main economic objects of the islands will be eco-friendly hotels and fish processing plants. We would also develop tropical agriculture and Russian Imperial University.

The development of the islands would take between ten to fifteen years, estimated Bakov, and it was projected up to 1000 I-Kiribati as residents of the islands are known largely recruited from Christmas Island some 670km away, would eventually be employed.

The first stage of the project would be an immediate financial injection of US$120m to the Kiribati government, said Bakov, followed by US$230m for the first stage of infrastructure construction on Malden Island, as well as additional taxes and customs for the Kiribati government.

Although the islands would act as a base for the Romanov Empire, Bakov did not anticipate many Russians migrating permanently to Kiribati, as the climate was too harsh and the distance would be too great.

The equatorial climate doesnt suit so well the Russian people ... we consider that the immigration to Australia and NZ will still be much more desirable for them, he said.

So we would assume the quantity of the Russian people living permanently on the islands will be one to two percent. However financial investments from the Russians will be much more considerable.

Emil Schutz, an I-Kiribati MP who has been working closely with the Bakovs on the project, said his country had tried for decades to spark international investment in Kiribati, but rising sea-levels and the projected impact of climate change were a strong deterrent.

Although large swaths of Kiribati are at imminent threat of rising sea levels, Malden Island is higher than the mainland of Kiribati and the effects of climate change would take longer to be felt, Schutz said.

Schutz said the Bakovs monetary investment in Kiribati was the governments primary concern, and the establishment of a base for the Romanov Empire was a secondary consideration, but Schutz felt the impact of reviving the Russian monarchy had been overstated and that was not the Bakovs primary motivation for investing in Kiribati.

These islands are very remote and far away from the main islands, and if the government wanted to do something to develop them it would cost millions of dollars, which is not a priority at the moment, said Schutz, who said the proposal was currently being assessed by the Foreign Investment Commission.

The country has been looking for investors since independence, and no one has been interested in investing any money. It is a good thing that someone is looking at doing something on these islands that arent being used by the government or people living on them. I would be very interested to see something happen on these islands.

According to Schutz, the three islands in question are arid and lacking in natural resources, having been extensively mined of their rich phosphate stores by an Australian mining company many decades ago.

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Russian millionaire details plans for new Romanov empire on Pacific islands - The Guardian

Rainforest Trees Are Like Islands – The Atlantic

In the 1970s, biologists realized something interesting about islands: There was a correlation between their size and the number of species they harbored, apparently a kind of evolutionary natural law. Soon, the idea was extended to other kinds of geographythe number of mammal species on mountaintops, similar to islands in their isolation, can also be predicted by their area. The relationship between species number and area has become one of the abiding fascinations of modern ecology. Now, drawing on six years of fieldwork in rainforest trees, perching in their crowns and watching the comings and goings of ants, researchers can report that the leafy giants also follow this rule.

There are more than 400 ant species roaming the rain forest, with about 120 of them living or spending their time in trees, says Steve Yanoviak, an ecologist at University of Louisville and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Yanoviak has spent the last 25 years ascending to the treetops with rock-climbing equipment to study ants as they roam around in those floating worlds, connected only with woody vines called lianas. As I was climbing trees, looking around in the canopy, he says, recalling the beginning of this project, it became pretty clear to me that ants actually were using lianas to get from place to place. Did trees connected by lianaspart of a network of high-wire highwayshave more species diversity than those that stood alone? And did those that stood alone, unconnected, have patterns in species numbers like islands and mountains?

He and his graduate student Benjamin Adams have been working to answer those questions in the Panamanian forest of the Barro Colorado National Monument. They have recently published a new study, for which the researchers and assistants climbed up to the crowns of more than 200 trees and put out a dollop of tuna or meat mixed with honey. That's basically a dream food for an ant, Yanoviak says, and it draws them in over the course of the one-hour observation period. The researchers kept track of which ants showed up to feed or just wander through.

Over the six years of the study, they found that larger standalone trees do tend to have larger numbers of ant species than smaller ones, much like islands or mountain tops. Thats interesting, Yanoviak says, because the trees are not all that far from each other, even for ants. We were really impressed to see that mathematically, the size of the tree determines how many ant species live in it, he says, as long as it doesnt have lianas.

Because when the trees are connected by lianas, that pattern disappears. Trees with vines, regardless of size, have more ant species than unconnected trees, on average an increase of 25 percent. It doesnt matter if you have one or 100 lianas, you will have more species, Yanoviak says.

Essentially, once the trees are connected with vines, they dont function as individual trees anymore, from the perspective of ant biodiversity. That suggests that these vines are important thoroughfares and promoters of biodiversity in the forest, turning it from an archipelago of tree islands to something larger and more connected.

The researchers expect to release another chapter in the tale of the ants and vines in the near future. In these same research plots, the studys third author, Stefan Schnitzer, has been running a parallel experiment concerning the effect of lianas on the trees themselves. Part of the experiment involves removing the lianas from half the plots to see how the trees respond. Adams and Yanoviak have been watching to see what the ants do. Even with their super-highways gone, so far, the ants seem to be surprisingly resilient, and loyal to their now-isolated home trees.

You could tell they didnt like it, he says. They shut down their activities and stopped foraging. But they didn't disappear or pack up and leave.

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Rainforest Trees Are Like Islands - The Atlantic

China Assails US Pledge to Defend Disputed Islands Controlled by Japan – New York Times


New York Times
China Assails US Pledge to Defend Disputed Islands Controlled by Japan
New York Times
BEIJING China reacted with strong displeasure on Saturday to a promise by Defense Secretary Jim Mattis that the United States would defend two uninhabited islands in the East China Sea that Japan controls but China also claims as its own. Mr. Mattis ...
Islands on the frontline of a new global flashpoint: China v JapanThe Guardian
Mattis: US will defend Japanese islands claimed by ChinaCNN
US would defend Japan's disputed islands despite Chinese warningUPI.com
New York Post -ABC News
all 1,135 news articles »

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China Assails US Pledge to Defend Disputed Islands Controlled by Japan - New York Times

Former Steinbrenner home on Davis Islands sells for nearly $6.3 … – Tampabay.com

TAMPA Tampa's Bay's luxury market is kicking off another strong year with the $6.275 million sale of an 8,000-square-foot bayfront home on Davis Islands.

The seven-bedroom, seven-bath home sold in late January in an off-market transaction. The deed had not been recorded as of Friday, but the seller was a pair of trusts in the name of Christina S. Lavery, records show.

Lavery formerly was married to New York Yankees chairman Hal Steinbrenner, who with his brother Hank inherited the team from their late father, George Steinbrenner.

Tampa Bay notched eight sales above $6 million last year compared to none in 2015. Of the top 25 priciest homes sold last year, four were in Davis Islands, the most of any bay area community.

Previous coverage: Here are Tampa Bay's 25 priciest homes of 2016

"There is a very limited supply of open bay property in Tampa,'' said Stephen Gay, the Smith & Associates listing agent. "Davis Island is exceptionally attractive because it is very convenient to downtown Tampa and all South Tampa has to offer.''

Contact Susan Taylor Martin at smartin@tampabay.com or (727) 893-8642. Follow @susanskate

Former Steinbrenner home on Davis Islands sells for nearly $6.3 million 02/06/17 [Last modified: Monday, February 6, 2017 3:44pm] Photo reprints | Article reprints

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Former Steinbrenner home on Davis Islands sells for nearly $6.3 ... - Tampabay.com

Early Islands – Paste Magazine

When you think about man-made islands, your thoughts may immediately go to Palm Jumeirah in Dubai or any number of other artificial islands around the world. But what most dont know is that people have been building islands in the British Isles for thousands of years.

These early islands, known as crannogs, look much different than a typical island and consisted of wooden stakes or piles that were driven into lake beds and supported hut-like dwellings. Scientists have discovered hundreds of these structures throughout Scotland and Ireland, many dating back as far as five thousand years ago.

Leading the way in uncovering the crannogs is Nick Dixon, director and founder of the Scottish Trust for Underwater Archaeology. He and Barrie Andrian lead the excavation of Oakbank crannog on Loch Tay in Kenmore, Scotland.

Oakbank, where digging began in 1980, was the first underwater excavation of its kind in Scotland and to this day is still only halfway completed. The crannog is incredibly difficult to excavate because the site forms a 10-ft mound of material that measures 35,000 cubic feet, all of which lies underwater and must be studied by divers.

The 13-mile-long Loch Tay is home to at least 18 catalogued crannogs, most of which have not been fully excavated. Many of Scotlands lochs hold the remnants of crannogs from the 5th or 2nd centuries BC and offer archaeologists incredible information about the people who created them.

Theres a wealth of information down there, and the potential to rewrite prehistory and history, actually is enormous, said Andrian.

Dixon and Andrian, along with a team of researchers and scientists, constructed a replica of a crannog at the Scottish Crannog Centre that utilizes the same building materials and techniques that were most likely used in the original construction thousands of years ago.

By studying these structures, scientists believe that the crannogs were built as a defensive settlement and served as home to people off and on for centuries. Environmental stress on the land surrounding the lochs may have driven the people closer to the water and into more secure communities.

Because of limited funding and time, research on the crannogs is not as extensive as Dixon and Andrian would like, though they are hopeful that continued excavations of the Oakbank site will continue to give a better picture of what these original island-builders were like and how they formed their architectural wonders.

Top photo by Stuart Anthony CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Lauren Leising is a freelance writer based in Athens, Georgia.

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Early Islands - Paste Magazine

Saanich Peninsula, Gulf Islands schools closed as snow warning issued – Times Colonist

Update: Snowfall forced B.C. Transit to cancel at least 11 routes; at least 16 routes had to make detours to avoid treacherous streets, especially areas with hills.

Central Saanich police pulled over a Zamboni ice-rink-cleaning machine that was being used to clear roads by the Patricia Bay Highway.

- - -

Heavy snow and near blizzard conditions on southern Vancouver Island wreaked havoc on all forms of transportation Monday.

Aircraft, cars, buses and transport trucks were all delayed or faced poor driving conditions as snow continued through the day, with heavy snow falling late in the afternoon as temperatures fell.

Environment Canada issued a snowfall warning for Greater Victoria, advising that it would be worse on the Malahat.

The B.C. Ministry of Transportation said that heavy snowfall caused whiteout conditions on the Malahat in the afternoon. Drivers reported around 3:30 p.m. that northbound traffic was stalled with some cars slipping backwards.

A car driving too fast for the wintry conditions skidded off the slick roads and plunged 20 feet down a ravine in Cobble Hill.

Shawnigan Lake RCMP, Cowichan Bay Volunteer firefighters and B.C. Ambulance responded to the 3800 block of Cobble Hill Road just before noon to find the car down an embankment, said Fire Chief Charles Brown.

First responders climbed down the embankment, open the drivers door and help a woman up to the roadway, Brown said. The driver was taken to hospital with minor injuries.

When youre sitting around the zero-degree mark, this is probably one of the worst times for traction, Brown said.

Another vehicle incident north of Goldstream Park around 4:30 p.m. caused delays for drivers on the Trans Canada.

Shawnigan Lake RCMP advised anyone travelling over the Malahat to slow down, by as much as 20 km/h depending on conditions and leave lots of room between cars.

Harbour Air was grounded Monday as snow ruled the skies. We lost the day today, said Harbour Air executive vice-president Randy Wright. About 100 flights are grounded coast-wide when they shut down completely.

Harbour Air had been shut down on Friday and Saturday but managed to get morning flights into the air on Sunday before shutting down again in the afternoon.

Aircraft at Victoria International Airport had better luck Monday, but not much.

James Bogusz, vice-president of airport operations, said more than a dozen flights were cancelled and at least 50 per cent of flights that managed to get away were delayed.

Theres lots of snow at YYJ and lots of delays and cancellations today. The snow is having a big impact on travel, he said. Believe it or not though, the runway conditions here are pretty good but a lot of the backlog at Vancouver and Seattle is causing lots of grief for passengers getting in and out.

Roads all over Greater Victoria were a mess Monday with police forces reporting several minor collisions.

Victoria police asked drivers to consider not driving Monday afternoon when the heavy snow started to stick to the ground. As temps cool it will get even more slick out there, they said on Twitter.

Earlier in the day in Oak Bay, a car lost control on slippery roads at the corner of Haultain and Epworth streets around 9:15 a.m. and struck a fire hydrant, which caused a geyser of water to spill onto the streets, flooding several basements.

A single vehicle lost control coming down the hill and struck a hydrant, knocking the hydrant off the water main, said Oak Bay Fire Assistant Chief Gord Marshall.

A substantial amount of water gushed from the line, flowing down the road and into the basements of four homes on Epworth, Marshall said.

Oak Bay public works employees were on scene quickly and isolated the hydrant, cutting off the flow of water to prevent further damage. Firefighters pumped out one basement and used water vacuums to remove water from the other three homes.

Victoria police responded to two crashes Monday morning as a result of the slick conditions.

One car lost control on Esquimalt Road but the driver was uninjured. Around 10:30 a.m., two cars collided in a rear-ender in the 2600-block of Douglas Street, resulting in minor injuries to one person.

Just before 4 p.m., West Shore RCMP responded to a vehicle that flipped in the ditch on Sooke Road near Humpback Road. Three people in the car were uninjured.

The City of Victoria reported it started brining roads and plowing on Sunday to keep roads clear.

City officials reminded residents that it is a homeowners responsibility to keep the sidewalk in front of their residence clear of snow. Failure to do so can mean a fine of up to $125.

But on Monday night, snow was falling so fast and so heavily, residents in many parts of the region couldn't keep up with the onslaught, finding their driveways quickly filling with snow shortly after they shovelled. On one Oak Bay street, residents were out by the dozen clearing their sidewalks, some for the second or third time in the day.

Ryan Coney, manager of Totem Towing, reported they had more than 110 calls mostly minor accidents and cars off the road before noon on Monday. Normally the company handles 175 to 200 calls per day.

In Nanaimo, snow clearing crews were out with all available snow equipment on the road, and the city ordered another 600 tonnes of road salt.

To prepare for the big dump of snow crews started brining roads last Thursday and have been plowing and salting priority routes continually since 6 a.m. Friday. Crews will be moving onto secondary routes and residential areas as weather conditions allow.

Crews are working in the residential areas now, they will continue to do so until the weather moves them back to the priority routes, said David Myles, Nanaimos manager of roads and traffic services. We are anticipating more heavy snowfall this afternoon and into the evening. Please use care and caution when driving on snow covered roads.

B.C. Transit warned passengers in Victoria that road conditions could cause some buses to run behind schedule. Seven routes in Greater Victoria were adjusted because of weather.

Bus passengers are advised to check bctransit.com before embarking.

Schools in School District 63 were closed Monday, mostly affecting students on the Saanich Peninsula. Gulf Islands schools were also closed, along with Pacific Christian in Saanich and Queen Margarets in Duncan.

Camosun College cancelled evening classes at both campuses.

Saying winter conditions made some roads too icy and unsafe for its trucks, the Capital Regional District cancelled blue box collection in Dean Park.

Affected reidents were advised to hold onto their recyclables until Feb. 11.

The Greater Victoria school district cancelled all evening rentals of its facilities.

Snowfall is expected to continue into Tuesday morning. Warmer weather is forecast beginning Thursday.

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Saanich Peninsula, Gulf Islands schools closed as snow warning issued - Times Colonist

Future Islands played 7 new songs at House of Vans Chicago’s … – Brooklyn Vegan (blog)

With the original Brooklyn location open for five years (and one in London too), House of Vans has opened a second U.S. skate park/music venue, this one in Chicago. Future Islands christened the spot on Friday night (2/3), as part of a two-day Grand Opening celebration that also featured an open-house community even on Saturday (2/4). This was also the first show for Future Islands since announcing new album The Far Field, and they played seven of its 12 songs, including first single Ran, as well asfavorites like Balance, Spirit and hit Seasons (Waiting on You) peppered in. You can watch live video of them playing The Far FieldsRan and Aladdin and other songs, along with the House of Vans Chicago setlist, below.

The night also featured reunited 90s hip hop stars Digable Planets and rising Chicago rapper Noname. Pictures from their sets, and more of Future Islands, are in the gallery above.

Aladdin

Ran

SETILST: Future Islands @ House of Vans Chicago 2/3/2017 Aladdin * Ran * Long Flight Balance Cave * Candles * Day Glow Fire * Seasons (Waiting on You) North Star * Time on Her Side * Walking Through That Door Tin Man Spirit * = new song

photos by James Richards IV

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Future Islands played 7 new songs at House of Vans Chicago's ... - Brooklyn Vegan (blog)

Alister Town Center Columbia Apartments – Columbia, MD …

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Alister Town Center Columbia Apartments - Columbia, MD ...

Canary Islands – Wikipedia

The Canary Islands (; Spanish: Islas Canarias [izlas kanajas], locally:[ila kanaja]), also known as the Canaries (Spanish: Canarias), are an archipelago and autonomous community of Spain located on the Atlantic Ocean, 100 kilometres (62 miles) west of Morocco. The Canaries are among the outermost regions (OMR) of the European Union proper. It is also one of the eight regions with special consideration of historical nationality recognized as such by the Spanish Government.[3][4]

The main islands are (from largest to smallest) Tenerife, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, La Palma, La Gomera and El Hierro. The archipelago also includes a number of islands and islets: La Graciosa, Alegranza, Isla de Lobos, Montaa Clara, Roque del Oeste and Roque del Este. In ancient times, the island chain was often referred to as "the Fortunate Isles".[5] The Canary Islands is the most southerly region of Spain. The Canary Islands is the largest and most populated archipelago of the Macaronesia region.[6]

The archipelago's beaches, climate and important natural attractions, especially Maspalomas in Gran Canaria and Teide National Park and Mount Teide (a World Heritage Site) in Tenerife (the third tallest volcano in the world measured from its base on the ocean floor), make it a major tourist destination with over 12million visitors per year, especially Gran Canaria, Tenerife, Fuerteventura and Lanzarote.[7][8] The islands have a subtropical climate, with long warm summers and moderately warm winters.[9] The precipitation levels and the level of maritime moderation varies depending on location and elevation. Green areas as well as desert exist on the archipelago. Due to their location above the temperature inversion layer, the high mountains of these islands are ideal for astronomical observation. For this reason, two professional observatories, Teide Observatory on the island of Tenerife and Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on the island of La Palma, have been built on the islands.

The capital of the Autonomous Community is shared by the cities of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Las Palmas de Gran Canaria,[10][11] which in turn are the capitals of the provinces of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Province of Las Palmas. Las Palmas de Gran Canaria has been the largest city in the Canaries since 1768, except for a brief period in the 1910s.[12] Between the 1833 territorial division of Spain and 1927 Santa Cruz de Tenerife was the sole capital of the Canary Islands. In 1927 a decree ordered that the capital of the Canary Islands be shared, as it remains at present.[13][14] The third largest city of the Canary Islands is San Cristbal de La Laguna (a World Heritage Site) on Tenerife.[15][16][17] This city is also home to the Consejo Consultivo de Canarias, which is the supreme consultative body of the Canary Islands.[18]

During the times of the Spanish Empire the Canaries were the main stopover for Spanish galleons on their way to the Americas, who came south to catch the prevailing north east trade winds.[19][20]

The name Islas Canarias is likely derived from the Latin name Canariae Insulae, meaning "Islands of the Dogs", a name applied originally only to Gran Canaria. According to the historian Pliny the Elder, the Mauretanian king Juba II named the island Canaria because it contained "vast multitudes of dogs of very large size".[21]

Another speculation is that the so-called dogs were actually a species of monk seal (canis marinus or "sea dog" was a Latin term for "seal"[22]), critically endangered and no longer present in the Canary Islands.[23] The dense population of seals may have been the characteristic that most struck the few ancient Romans who established contact with these islands by sea.

Alternatively, it is said that the original inhabitants of the island, Guanches, used to worship dogs, mummified them and treated dogs generally as holy animals.[24] The ancient Greeks also knew about a people, living far to the west, who are the "dog-headed ones", who worshipped dogs on an island.[24] Some hypothesize that the Canary Islands dog-worship and the ancient Egyptian cult of the dog-headed god, Anubis are closely connected[25] but there is no explanation given as to which one was first.

Other theories speculate that the name comes from the Nukkari Berber tribe living in the Moroccan Atlas, named in Roman sources as Canarii, though Pliny again mentions the relation of this term with dogs.[citation needed]

The connection to dogs is retained in their depiction on the islands' coat-of-arms (shown above).

It is considered that the aborigines of Gran Canaria called themselves "Canarii". It is possible that after being conquered, this name was used in plural in Spanish i.e. -as to refer to all of the islands as the Canarii-as

What is certain is that the name of the islands does not derive from the canary bird; rather, the birds are named after the islands.

Tenerife is the most populous island, and also the largest island of the archipelago. Gran Canaria, with 865,070 inhabitants, is both the Canary Islands' second most populous island, and the third most populous one in Spain after Majorca. The island of Fuerteventura is the second largest in the archipelago and located 100km (62mi) from the African coast.

The islands form the Macaronesia ecoregion with the Azores, Cape Verde, Madeira, and the Savage Isles. The Canary Islands is the largest and most populated archipelago of the Macaronesia region.[6] The archipelago consists of seven large and several smaller islands, all of which are volcanic in origin.[26] The Teide volcano on Tenerife is the highest mountain in Spain, and the third tallest volcano on Earth on a volcanic ocean island. All the islands except La Gomera have been active in the last million years; four of them (Lanzarote, Tenerife, La Palma and El Hierro) have historical records of eruptions since European discovery. The islands rise from Jurassic oceanic crust associated with the opening of the Atlantic. Underwater magmatism commenced during the Cretaceous, and reached the ocean's surface during the Miocene. The islands are considered as a distinct physiographic section of the Atlas Mountains province, which in turn is part of the larger African Alpine System division.

In the summer of 2011 a series of low-magnitude earthquakes occurred beneath El Hierro. These had a linear trend of northeast-southwest. In October a submarine eruption occurred about 2km (114mi) south of Restinga. This eruption produced gases and pumice, but no explosive activity was reported.

According to the position of the islands with respect to the north-east trade winds, the climate can be mild and wet or very dry. Several native species form laurisilva forests.

As a consequence, the individual islands in the Canary archipelago tend to have distinct microclimates. Those islands such as El Hierro, La Palma and La Gomera lying to the west of the archipelago have a climate which is influenced by the moist Gulf Stream. They are well vegetated even at low levels and have extensive tracts of sub-tropical laurisilva forest. As one travels east toward the African coast, the influence of the gulf stream diminishes, and the islands become increasingly arid. Fuerteventura and Lanzarote the islands which are closest to the African mainland are effectively desert or semi desert. Gran Canaria is known as a "continent in miniature" for its diverse landscapes like Maspalomas and Roque Nublo. In terms of its climate Tenerife is particularly interesting. The north of the island lies under the influence of the moist Atlantic winds and is well vegetated, while the south of the island around the tourist resorts of Playa de las Americas and Los Cristianos is arid. The island rises to almost 4,000m (13,000ft) above sea level, and at altitude, in the cool relatively wet climate, forests of the endemic pine Pinus canariensis thrive. Many of the plant species in the Canary Islands, like the Canary Island pine and the dragon tree, Dracaena draco are endemic, as noted by Sabin Berthelot and Philip Barker Webb in their epic work, L'Histoire Naturelle des les Canaries (183550).

Four of Spain's thirteen national parks are located in the Canary Islands, more than any other autonomous community. Teide National Park is the most visited in Spain, and the oldest and largest within the Canary Islands. The parks are:

The following table shows the highest mountains in each of the islands:

The climate is subtropical and desertic, moderated by the sea and in summer by the trade winds. There are a number of microclimates and the classifications range mainly from semi-arid to desert. According to the Kppen climate classification,[27] the majority of the Canary Islands have a hot desert climate represented as BWh. There also exists a subtropical humid climate which is very influenced by the ocean in the middle of the islands of La Gomera, Tenerife and La Palma; where the laurisilva forests grow.

The seven major islands, one minor island, and several small islets were originally volcanic islands, formed by the Canary hotspot. The Canary Islands is the only place in Spain where volcanic eruptions have been recorded during the Modern Era, with some volcanoes still active (El Hierro, 2011).[35] Volcanic islands such as those in the Canary chain often have steep ocean cliffs caused by catastrophic debris avalanches and landslides.[36]

The Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands consists of two provinces, Las Palmas and Santa Cruz de Tenerife, whose capitals (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Santa Cruz de Tenerife) are capitals of the autonomous community. Each of the seven major islands is ruled by an island council named Cabildo Insular.

The international boundary of the Canaries is the subject of dispute between Spain and Morocco. Morocco's official position is that international laws regarding territorial limits do not authorise Spain to claim seabed boundaries based on the territory of the Canaries, since the Canary Islands enjoy a high degree of autonomy. In fact, the islands do not enjoy any special degree of autonomy as each one of the Spanish regions is considered an autonomous community. Under the Law of the Sea, the only islands not granted territorial waters or an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) are those that are not fit for human habitation or do not have an economic life of their own, which is clearly not the case of the Canary Islands.[citation needed]

The boundary determines the ownership of seabed oil deposits and other ocean resources. Morocco and Spain have therefore been unable to agree on a compromise regarding the territorial boundary, since neither nation wants to cede its claimed right to the vast resources whose ownership depends upon the boundary. In 2002, for example, Morocco rejected a unilateral Spanish proposal.[37]

The Islands have 13 seats in the Spanish Senate. Of these, 11 seats are directly elected, 3 for Gran Canaria, 3 for Tenerife, 1 for each other island; 2 seats are indirectly elected by the regional Autonomous Government. The local government is presided over by Fernando Clavijo, the current President of the Canary Islands.[38]

Before the arrival of humans, the Canaries were inhabited by prehistoric animals; for example, the giant lizard (Gallotia goliath) and the Tenerife and Gran Canaria giant rats.[39]

The islands were visited by the Phoenicians, the Greeks, and the Carthaginians. According to the first century Roman author and philosopher Pliny the Elder, the archipelago was found to be uninhabited when visited by the Carthaginians under Hanno the Navigator, but that they saw ruins of great buildings.[40] This story may suggest that the islands were inhabited by other peoples prior to the Guanches. King Juba II, Augustus's Numidian protg, is credited with discovering the islands for the Western world. He dispatched a naval contingent to re-open the dye production facility at Mogador in what is now western Morocco in the early first century Common Era.[41] That same naval force was subsequently sent on an exploration of the Canary Islands, using Mogador as their mission base.

The Romans named the islands Ninguaria or Nivaria (Tenerife), Canaria (Gran Canaria), Pluvialia or Invale (Lanzarote), Ombrion (La Palma), Planasia (Fuerteventura), Iunonia or Junonia (El Hierro) and Capraria (La Gomera).

When the Europeans began to explore the islands in the late Middle Ages, they encountered several indigenous peoples living at a Neolithic level of technology. Although the prehistory of the settlement of the Canary Islands is still unclear, linguistic and genetic analyses seem to indicate that at least some of these inhabitants shared a common origin with the Berbers of the Maghreb.[42] The pre-colonial inhabitants came to be known collectively as the Guanches, although Guanches was originally the name for only the indigenous inhabitants of Tenerife.[43] From the 14th century onward, numerous visits were made by sailors from Majorca, Portugal and Genoa. Lancelotto Malocello settled on Lanzarote in 1312. The Majorcans established a mission with a bishop in the islands that lasted from 1350 to 1400.

There may have been a Portuguese expedition that attempted to colonise the islands as early as 1336, but there is not enough hard evidence to support this. In 1402, the Castilian conquest of the islands began, with the expedition of French explorers Jean de Bthencourt and Gadifer de la Salle, nobles and vassals of Henry III of Castile, to Lanzarote. From there, they conquered Fuerteventura (1405) and El Hierro. Bthencourt received the title King of the Canary Islands, but still recognised King Henry III as his overlord.

Bthencourt also established a base on the island of La Gomera, but it would be many years before the island was truly conquered. The natives of La Gomera, and of Gran Canaria, Tenerife, and La Palma, resisted the Castilian invaders for almost a century. In 1448 Maciot de Bthencourt sold the lordship of Lanzarote to Portugal's Prince Henry the Navigator, an action that was not accepted by the natives nor by the Castilians. Despite Pope Nicholas V ruling that the Canary Islands were under Portuguese control, a crisis swelled to a revolt which lasted until 1459 with the final expulsion of the Portuguese. In 1479, Portugal and Castile signed the Treaty of Alcovas. The treaty settled disputes between Castile and Portugal over the control of the Atlantic, in which Castilian control of the Canary Islands was recognised but which also confirmed Portuguese possession of the Azores, Madeira, the Cape Verde islands and gave them rights to lands discovered and to be discovered ... and any other island which might be found and conquered from the Canary islands beyond toward Guinea.

The Castilians continued to dominate the islands, but due to the topography and the resistance of the native Guanches, complete pacification was not achieved until 1495, when Tenerife and La Palma were finally subdued by Alonso Fernndez de Lugo. After that, the Canaries were incorporated into the Kingdom of Castile.

After the conquest, the Castilians imposed a new economic model, based on single-crop cultivation: first sugarcane; then wine, an important item of trade with England. In this era, the first institutions of colonial government were founded. Both Gran Canaria, a colony of the Crown of Castile since March 6, 1480 (from 1556, of Spain), and Tenerife, a Spanish colony since 1495, had separate governors.

The cities of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Las Palmas de Gran Canaria became a stopping point for the Spanish conquerors, traders, and missionaries on their way to the New World. This trade route brought great prosperity to some of the social sectors of the islands. The islands became quite wealthy and soon were attracting merchants and adventurers from all over Europe. Magnificent palaces and churches were built on La Palma during this busy, prosperous period. The Church of El Salvador survives as one of the island's finest examples of the architecture of the 16th century.

The Canaries' wealth invited attacks by pirates and privateers. Ottoman Turkish admiral and privateer Kemal Reis ventured into the Canaries in 1501, while Murat Reis the Elder captured Lanzarote in 1585.

The most severe attack took place in 1599, during the Dutch Revolt. A Dutch fleet of 74 ships and 12,000 men, commanded by Pieter van der Does, attacked the capital Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (the city had 3,500 of Gran Canaria's 8,545 inhabitants). The Dutch attacked the Castillo de la Luz, which guarded the harbor. The Canarians evacuated civilians from the city, and the Castillo surrendered (but not the city). The Dutch moved inland, but Canarian cavalry drove them back to Tamaraceite, near the city.

The Dutch then laid siege to the city, demanding the surrender of all its wealth. They received 12 sheep and 3 calves. Furious, the Dutch sent 4,000 soldiers to attack the Council of the Canaries, who were sheltering in the village of Santa Brgida. 300 Canarian soldiers ambushed the Dutch in the village of Monte Lentiscal, killing 150 and forcing the rest to retreat. The Dutch concentrated on Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, attempting to burn it down. The Dutch pillaged Maspalomas, on the southern coast of Gran Canaria, San Sebastin on La Gomera, and Santa Cruz on La Palma, but eventually gave up the siege of Las Palmas and withdrew.

In 1618 the Barbary pirates attacked Lanzarote and La Gomera taking 1000 captives to be sold as slaves.[44] Another noteworthy attack occurred in 1797, when Santa Cruz de Tenerife was attacked by a British fleet under Horatio Nelson on 25 July. The British were repulsed, losing almost 400 men. It was during this battle that Nelson lost his right arm.

The sugar-based economy of the islands faced stiff competition from Spain's American colonies. Low prices in the sugar market in the 19th century caused severe recessions on the islands. A new cash crop, cochineal (cochinilla), came into cultivation during this time, saving the islands' economy.

By the end of the 18th century, Canary Islanders had already emigrated to Spanish American territories, such as Havana, Veracruz, Santo Domingo,[45]San Antonio, Texas[46] and St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana.[47][48] These economic difficulties spurred mass emigration, primarily to the Americas, during the 19th and first half of the 20th century. Between 1840 and 1890 as many as 40,000 Canary Islanders emigrated to Venezuela. Also, thousands of Canarians moved to Puerto Rico where the Spanish monarchy felt that Canarians would adapt to island life better than other immigrants from the mainland of Spain. Deeply entrenched traditions, such as the Mascaras Festival in the town of Hatillo, Puerto Rico, are an example of Canarian culture still preserved in Puerto Rico. Similarly, many thousands of Canarians emigrated to the shores of Cuba.[49] During the SpanishAmerican War of 1898, the Spanish fortified the islands against possible American attack, but an attack never came.

Sirera and Renn (2004)[50] distinguish two different types of expeditions, or voyages, during the period 17701830, which they term "the Romantic period":

First are "expeditions financed by the States, closely related with the official scientific Institutions. characterised by having strict scientific objectives (and inspired by) the spirit of Illustration and progress". In this type of expedition, Sirera and Renn include the following travellers:

The second type of expedition identified by Sirera and Renn is one that took place starting from more or less private initiatives. Among these, the key exponents were the following:

Sirera and Renn identify the period 17701830 as one in which "In a panorama dominated until that moment by France and England enters with strength and brio Germany of the Romantic period whose presence in the islands will increase".

At the beginning of the 20th century, the British introduced a new cash-crop, the banana, the export of which was controlled by companies such as Fyffes.

The rivalry between the elites of the cities of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and Santa Cruz de Tenerife for the capital of the islands led to the division of the archipelago into two provinces in 1927. This has not laid to rest the rivalry between the two cities, which continues to this day.

During the time of the Second Spanish Republic, Marxist and anarchist workers' movements began to develop, led by figures such as Jose Miguel Perez and Guillermo Ascanio. However, outside of a few municipalities, these organisations were a minority and fell easily to Nationalist forces during the Spanish Civil War.

In 1936, Francisco Franco was appointed General Commandant of the Canaries. He joined the military revolt of July 17 which began the Spanish Civil War. Franco quickly took control of the archipelago, except for a few points of resistance on La Palma and in the town of Vallehermoso, on La Gomera. Though there was never a proper war in the islands, the post-war suppression of political dissent on the Canaries was most severe.[51]

During the Second World War, Winston Churchill prepared plans for the British seizure of the Canary Islands as a naval base, in the event of Gibraltar being invaded from the Spanish mainland.

Opposition to Franco's regime did not begin to organise until the late 1950s, which experienced an upheaval of parties such as the Communist Party of Spain and the formation of various nationalist, leftist parties.

After the death of Franco, there was a pro-independence armed movement based in Algeria, the Movement for the Independence and Self-determination of the Canaries Archipelago (MAIAC). In 1968, the Organisation of African Unity recognized the MAIAC as a legitimate African independence movement, and declared the Canary Islands as an African territory still under foreign rule.[52]

Currently, there are some pro-independence political parties, like the CNC and the Popular Front of the Canary Islands, but these parties are non-violent, and their popular support is almost insignificant, with no presence in either the autonomous parliament or the cabildos insulares.

After the establishment of a democratic constitutional monarchy in Spain, autonomy was granted to the Canaries via a law passed in 1982. In 1983, the first autonomous elections were held. The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) won. In the 2007 elections, the PSOE gained a plurality of seats, but the nationalist Canarian Coalition and the conservative Partido Popular (PP) formed a ruling coalition government.[53]

According to "Centro de Investigaciones Sociolgicas" (Sociological Research Center) in 2010, 43.5% of the population of the Canary Islands feels more Canarian than Spanish (37.6%), only Canarian (7.6%), compared to 5.4% that feels more Spanish than Canarian (2.4%) or only Spanish (3%). The most popular choice of those who feel equally Spanish and Canarian, with 49.9%. With these data, one of the Canary recorded levels of identification with higher autonomy from Spain.

The Canary Islands have a population of 2,117,519 inhabitants (2011), making it the eighth most populous of Spain's autonomous communities, with a density of 282.6 inhabitants per square kilometre. The total area of the archipelago is 7,493km2 (2,893sqmi).[58]

The Canarian population includes long-tenured residents and new waves of mainland Spanish immigrants, as well as Portuguese, Italians, Flemings and Britons. Of the total Canarian population in 2009 (2,098,593) 1,799,373 were Spanish and 299,220 foreigners. Of these, the majority are Europeans (55%), including Germans (39,505), British (37,937) and Italians (24,177). There are also 86,287 inhabitants from the Americas, mainly Colombians (21,798), Venezuelans (11,958), Cubans (11,098) and Argentines (10,159). There are also 28,136 African residents, mostly Moroccans (16,240).[61]

The population of the islands according to the 2010 data are:[62]

The Roman Catholic branch of Christianity has been the majority religion in the archipelago for more than five centuries, ever since the Conquest of the Canary Islands. However, there are other religious communities.

The overwhelming majority of native Canarians are Roman Catholic with various smaller foreign-born populations of other Christian beliefs such as Protestants from northern Europe.

The appearance of the Virgin of Candelaria (Patron of Canary Islands) was credited with moving the Canary Islands toward Christianity. Two Catholic saints were born in the Canary Islands: Peter of Saint Joseph de Betancur[63] and Jos de Anchieta.[64] Both born on the island of Tenerife, they were respectively missionaries in Guatemala and Brazil.

The Canary Islands are divided into two Catholic dioceses, each governed by a bishop:

Separate from the overwhelming Christian majority are a minority of Muslims.[65] Other religious faiths represented include Jehovah Witnesses, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as well as Hinduism.[65] Minority religions are also present such as the Church of the Guanche People which is classified as a neo-pagan native religion,[65] it also highlights Buddhism,[65]Judaism,[65]Baha'i,[65]Chinese religions[65] and Afro-American religion.[65]

Among the followers of Islam, the Islamic Federation of the Canary Islands exists to represent the Islamic community in the Canary Islands as well as to provide practical support to members of the Islamic community.[66]

The distribution of beliefs in 2012 according to the CIS Barometer Autonomy was as follows:[67]

El Hierro, the westernmost island, covers 268.71km2 (103.75sqmi), making it the smallest of the major islands, and the least populous with 10,753 inhabitants. The whole island was declared Reserve of the Biosphere in 2000. Its capital is Valverde. Also known as Ferro, it was once believed to be the westernmost land in the world.

Fuerteventura, with a surface of 1,660km2 (640sqmi), is the second-most extensive island of the archipelago. It has been declared a Biosphere reserve by Unesco. It has a population of 100,929. Being also the most ancient of the islands, it is the one that is more eroded: its highest point is the Peak of the Bramble, at a height of 807 metres (2,648 feet). Its capital is Puerto del Rosario.

Gran Canaria has 845,676 inhabitants. The capital, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (377,203 inhabitants), is the most populous city and shares the status of capital of the Canaries with Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Gran Canaria's surface area is 1,560km2 (600sqmi). In center of the island lie the Roque Nublo 1,813 metres (5,948 feet) and Pico de las Nieves ("Peak of Snow") 1,949 metres (6,394 feet). In the south of island are the Maspalomas Dunes (Gran Canaria), these are the biggest tourist attractions.

La Gomera has an area of 369.76km2 (142.77sqmi) and is the second least populous island with 22,622 inhabitants. Geologically it is one of the oldest of the archipelago. The insular capital is San Sebastian de La Gomera. Garajonay's National Park is located on the island.

Lanzarote is the easternmost island and one of the most ancient of the archipelago, and it has shown evidence of recent volcanic activity. It has a surface of 845.94km2 (326.62sqmi), and a population of 139,506 inhabitants, including the adjacent islets of the Chinijo Archipelago. The capital is Arrecife, with 56,834 inhabitants.

The Chinijo Archipelago includes the islands La Graciosa, Alegranza, Montaa Clara, Roque del Este and Roque del Oeste. It has a surface of 40.8km2 (15.8sqmi), and a population of 658 inhabitants all of them in the la Graciosa island. With 29km2 (11sqmi), La Graciosa, is the smallest inhabited island of the Canaries, and the major island of the Chinijo Archipelago.

La Palma, with 86,528 inhabitants covering an area of 708.32km2 (273.48sqmi), is in its entirety a biosphere reserve. It shows no recent signs of volcanic activity, even though the volcano Tenegua entered into eruption last in 1971. In addition, it is the second-highest island of the Canaries, with the Roque de los Muchachos 2,423 metres (7,949 feet) as highest point. Santa Cruz de La Palma (known to those on the island as simply "Santa Cruz") is its capital.

Tenerife is, with its area of 2,034km2 (785sqmi), the most extensive island of the Canary Islands. In addition, with 906,854 inhabitants it is the most populated island of the archipelago and Spain. Two of the islands' principal cities are located on it: The capital, Santa Cruz de Tenerife and San Cristbal de La Laguna (a World Heritage Site). San Cristbal de La Laguna, the second city of the island is home to the oldest university in the Canary Islands, the University of La Laguna. The Teide, with its 3,718 metres (12,198 feet) is the highest peak of Spain and also a World Heritage Site. Tenerife is the site of the worst air disaster in the history of aviation, in which 583 people were killed in the collision of two Boeing 747s on March 27, 1977.

The economy is based primarily on tourism, which makes up 32% of the GDP. The Canaries receive about 12million tourists per year. Construction makes up nearly 20% of the GDP and tropical agriculture, primarily bananas and tobacco, are grown for export to Europe and the Americas. Ecologists are concerned that the resources, especially in the more arid islands, are being overexploited but there are still many agricultural resources like tomatoes, potatoes, onions, cochineal, sugarcane, grapes, vines, dates, oranges, lemons, figs, wheat, barley, maize, apricots, peaches and almonds.

The economy is 25billion (2001 GDP figures). The islands experienced continuous growth during a 20-year period, up until 2001, at a rate of approximately 5% annually. This growth was fueled mainly by huge amounts of Foreign Direct Investment, mostly to develop tourism real estate (hotels and apartments), and European Funds (near 11billion euro in the period from 2000 to 2007), since the Canary Islands are labelled Region Objective 1 (eligible for euro structural funds).[citation needed] Additionally, the EU allows the Canary Islands Government to offer special tax concessions for investors who incorporate under the Zona Especial Canaria (ZEC) regime and create more than 5 jobs.[citation needed]

Spain gave permission in August 2014 for Repsol and its partners to explore oil and gas prospects off the Canary Islands, involving an investment of 7.5 billion over four years, to commence at the end of 2016. Repsol at the time said the area could ultimately produce 100,000 barrels of oil a day, which would meet 10 percent of Spain's energy needs.[69] However, the analysis of samples obtained showed did not show the necessary volume nor quality to consider future extraction, and the project was scrapped.[70]

The Canary Islands have great natural attractions, climate and beaches make the islands a major tourist destination, being visited each year by about 12million people (11,986,059 in 2007, noting 29% of Britons, 22% of Spanish, not residents of the Canaries, and 21% of Germans). Among the islands, Tenerife has the largest number of tourists received annually, followed by Gran Canaria and Lanzarote.[7][8] The archipelago's principal tourist attraction is the Teide National Park (in Tenerife) where the highest mountain in Spain and third largest volcano in the world (Mount Teide), receives over 2.8million visitors annually.[71]

The combination of high mountains, proximity to Europe, and clean air has made the Roque de los Muchachos peak (on La Palma island) a leading location for telescopes like the Grantecan.

The islands are outside the European Union customs territory and VAT area, though politically within the EU. Instead of VAT there is a local Sales Tax (IGIC) which has a general rate of 7%, an increased tax rate of 13.5%, a reduced tax rate of 3% and a zero tax rate for certain basic need products and services. Consequently, some products are subject to import tax and VAT if being exported from the islands into mainland Spain or the rest of the EU.

Canarian time is Western European Time (WET) (or GMT; in summer one hour ahead of GMT). So Canarian time is one hour behind that of mainland Spain and the same as that of the UK, Ireland and Portugal all year round.

The Canary Islands have eight airports altogether, two of the main ports of Spain, and an extensive network of autopistas (highways) and other roads. For a road map see multimap.[72]

There are large ferry boats that link islands as well as fast ferries linking most of the islands. Both types can transport large numbers of passengers and cargo (including vehicles). Fast ferries are made of aluminium and powered by modern and efficient diesel engines, while conventional ferries have a steel hull and are powered by heavy oil. Fast ferries travel relatively quickly (in excess of 30 knots) and are a faster method of transportation than the conventional ferry (some 20 knots). A typical ferry ride between La Palma and Tenerife may take up to eight hours or more while a fast ferry takes about 2 and a half hours and between Tenerife and Gran Canaria can be about one hour.

The largest airport is the Gran Canaria airport. It is also the 5th largest airport in Spain. The biggest port is in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. It is an important port for commerce with Europe, Africa and the Americas. It is the 4th biggest commercial port in Spain with more than 1,400,000 TEU's. The largest commercial companies of the world, including MSC and Maersk, operate here. In this port there is an international post of the Red Cross, one of only four points like this all around the world. Tenerife has two airports, Tenerife North Airport and Tenerife South Airport.[73]

The two main islands (Tenerife and Gran Canaria) receive the greatest number of passengers.[74]

The port of Las Palmas is first in freight traffic in the islands,[75] while the port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife is the first fishing port with approximately 7,500 tons of fish caught, according to the Spanish government publication Statistical Yearbook of State Ports. Similarly, it is the second port in Spain as regards ship traffic, only surpassed by the Port of Algeciras Bay.[76] The port's facilities include a border inspection post (BIP) approved by the European Union, which is responsible for inspecting all types of imports from third countries or exports to countries outside the European Economic Area. The port of Los Cristianos (Tenerife) has the greatest number of passengers recorded in the Canary Islands, followed by the port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife.[77] The Port of Las Palmas is the third port in the islands in passengers and first in number of vehicles transported.[77]

The SS America was beached at the Canary islands, in the nineties. However, the ocean liner fell apart after some years and parts of ship washed away.

The Tenerife Tram opened in 2007 and the only one in the Canary Islands, travelling between the cities of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and San Cristbal de La Laguna. It is currently planned to have three lines in the Canary Islands (two in Tenerife and one in Gran Canaria). The planned Gran Canaria tram route will be from Las Palmas de Gran Canaria to Maspalomas (south).[78]

The official symbols from nature associated with Canary Islands are the bird Serinus canaria (canary) and the Phoenix canariensis palm.[80]

Before the arrival of the Aborigines, the Canary Islands was inhabited by endemic animals, such as some extinct; giant lizards (Gallotia goliath), giant rats (Canariomys bravoi and Canariomys tamarani)[81] and giant tortoises (Geochelone burchardi and Geochelone vulcanica),[82] among others.

With a range of habitats, the Canary Islands exhibit diverse plant species. The bird life includes European and African species, such as the black-bellied sandgrouse; and a rich variety of endemic (local) taxa including the:

Terrestrial fauna includes geckos, wall lizards, and three endemic species of recently rediscovered and critically endangered giant lizard: the El Hierro giant lizard (or Roque Chico de Salmor giant lizard), La Gomera giant lizard, and La Palma giant lizard. Mammals include the Canarian shrew, Canary big-eared bat, the Algerian hedgehog (which may have been introduced) and the more recently introduced mouflon. Some endemic mammals, the lava mouse, Tenerife giant rat and Gran Canaria giant rat, are extinct, as are the Canary Islands quail, long-legged bunting, and the eastern Canary Islands chiffchaff.

The marine life found in the Canary Islands is also varied, being a combination of North Atlantic, Mediterranean and endemic species. In recent years, the increasing popularity of both scuba diving and underwater photography have provided biologists with much new information on the marine life of the islands.

Fish species found in the islands include many species of shark, ray, moray eel, bream, jack, grunt, scorpionfish, triggerfish, grouper, goby, and blenny. In addition, there are many invertebrate species, including sponge, jellyfish, anemone, crab, mollusc, sea urchin, starfish, sea cucumber and coral.

There are a total of 5 different species of marine turtle that are sighted periodically in the islands, the most common of these being the endangered loggerhead sea turtle.[83] The other four are the green sea turtle, hawksbill sea turtle, leatherback sea turtle and Kemp's ridley sea turtle. Currently, there are no signs that any of these species breed in the islands, and so those seen in the water are usually migrating. However, it is believed that some of these species may have bred in the islands in the past, and there are records of several sightings of leatherback sea turtle on beaches in Fuerteventura, adding credibility to the theory.

Marine mammals include the large varieties of cetaceans including rare and not well-known species (see more details in the Marine life of the Canary Islands). Hooded seals[84] have also been known to be vagrant in the Canary Islands every now and then. The Canary Islands were also formerly home to a population of the rarest pinniped in the world, the Mediterranean monk seal.

The Canary Islands officially has four national parks, of which two have been declared World Heritage Site by UNESCO, and the other two declared a World Biosphere Reserve, these national parks are:[85]

A unique form of wrestling known as Canarian wrestling (lucha canaria) has opponents stand in a special area called a "terrero" and try to throw each other to the ground using strength and quick movements.[87]

Another sport is the "game of the sticks" where opponents fence with long sticks. This may have come about from the shepherds of the islands who would challenge each other using their long walking sticks.[87]

Another sport is called the shepherd's jump (salto del pastor). This involves using a long stick to vault over an open area. This sport possibly evolved from the shepherd's need to occasionally get over an open area in the hills as they were tending their sheep.[87]

The two main football teams in the archipelago are: the CD Tenerife (founded in 1912) and UD Las Palmas (founded in 1949). Now Tenerife play in Liga Adelante and Las Palmas in La Liga.

The Carnival of Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Carnival of Las Palmas are one of the most famous Carnivals in Spain. It is celebrated on the streets between the months of February and March.

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