French Frigate Shoals is an atoll consisting of a large, crescent-shaped reef surrounding
numerous small, sandy islets. While the land area is only square kilometer (67 acres), the
total coral reef area of the shoals is over 938 square kilometers (232,000 acres).
French Frigate Shoals exhibits the classic features of a well-developed coral atoll. The
coral growth is atop an eroded volcano, which has been submerged for millions of years. A
steep-sided basalt pinnacle juts out of the water in the center of the atoll. This unique
rock formation is the last remnant of the original volcano. The pinnacle was named "La
Pérouse Pinnacle" after Compte de La Pérouse, who visited the atoll in 1786.
Tern Island, a part of the atoll, was formed into a runway to serve as a refueling stop
for planes enroute to Midway during World War II. The original
seawall, runway, and some of the buildings remain. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
continues to maintain a field station there, which is staffed year-round by two permanent
employees and a handful of volunteers.
The reef system associated with French Frigate Shoals supports the greatest variety of
coral species in the NWHI. These include table, finger, and lobe corals. It also supports
more than 600 species of invertebrates such as sponges, coral worms, snails, lobsters,
crabs, shrimps and clams, oysters, sea urchins, and sea stars. Many of these are endemic
species.
More than 150 species of algae live among the reefs, including red, green and brown
algae. The outer reef waters support gray reef sharks, butterfly fish, and large schools of
jacks and groupers.
Hundreds of green sea turtles inhabit French Frigate Shoals. Over 90% of the threatened
Hawaiian population of green sea turtles travel to the shoals for safe nesting. Satellite
tagging of these turtles indicates that most of them migrate to the Main Hawaiian Islands
to feed before returning to French Frigate Shoals to breed. Some of these turtles travel
northwest to feed, while others travel as far south as Johnston Atoll.
The many small islets of French Frigate Shoals provide refuge to the largest population
of endangered Hawaiian monk seals. Preserving this atoll is critical to their survival.
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