Mnemba Island (Tanzania)

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  • Place
| מספר מערכת 987007554033805171
Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Mnemba Island (Tanzania)
Coordinates
39.38388889 39.38388889 -5.820555555 -5.820555555 (gooearth )
See Also From tracing topical name
Islands Tanzania
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q24061
Library of congress: sh 97001724
Sources of Information
  • Work cat.: 96980942: Ecological baseline surveys of coral reefs and intertidal zones around Mnemba Island ... 1990:
  • GEOnet, Feb. 13, 1997
Wikipedia description:

Mnemba Island is a single small island located about 3 km off the northeast coast of Unguja, the largest island of the Zanzibar Archipelago, Tanzania, opposite Muyuni Beach. It is roughly triangular in shape, about 500 metres (1,640 ft) in diameter and about 1.5 kilometres (0.9 mi) in circumference. It is surrounded by an oval reef seven by four kilometres in extent. These reefs have been declared a marine conservation area. Mnemba Island and its reef are sometimes called Mnemba Atoll which is incorrect because an atoll is an island that encircles a lagoon, which is not the case for Mnemba Island. Mnemba Island is a popular scuba diving site, with a wide variety of corals and associated species, as well as occasional sightings of larger species such as turtles and dolphins. Calm conditions are most frequent in November and March, with maximum visibility. The island itself is privately owned and can be visited only as a guest at a price of US$1155 to US$1600 per person per night (2015 rates). As Mnemba is a private island, non-guests are not permitted to land on the island. The island has a 200-meter exclusion zone around the island within which non-guests are not permitted. Mnemba Island is a 90-minute drive from Stone Town across the main Zanzibar Island, before a twenty-minute boat crossing. The marine reserve comprises four distinct habitats which are home to a diverse array of Indian Ocean wildlife: Nesting place of threatened green sea turtles (monitoring and protection project has been underway since 1996) Humpback whales (July to September) Three species of dolphin Whale sharks (the world's largest fish) Migratory and resident shore birds feed and roost on the Island Approximately 600 species of coral reef fish. Green sea turtles can be seen laying their eggs on the beaches between February and September.

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