đī¸ Ogasawara Islands
UNESCO World Heritage Site and natural laboratory of evolution in the western Pacific
đ Fast Facts
- Archipelago of over 30 subtropical and tropical islands approximately 1,000 km south of mainland Japan
- UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2011, recognized for exceptional evolutionary processes and endemic biodiversity
- Accessible by 25.5-hour ferry from Tokyo; Nakodojima and peripheral reefs have restricted access to protect fragile ecosystems
- Home to critically endangered species including the Bonin flying fox and Bonin white-eye bird
The Ogasawara Islands, also known as the Bonin Islands, form a remote Pacific archipelago approximately 1,000 kilometres south of mainland Japan. Inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2011, the islands represent an exceptional natural laboratory for studying evolutionary processes in isolation. The combination of volcanic origins, geographic isolation, and subtropical-tropical climate has generated a distinct ecosystem with a remarkably high proportion of endemic species found nowhere ...