Page 31 - Ti Guide 2020 digital FRENCH - ENGLISH
P. 31

FAUNE
Sur la terre ferme, une des espèces à admirer est celle des hérons ; sur les côtes, les hirondelles de mer, les pélicans, les pétrels et les frégates, de grands oiseaux de mer dont les ailes déployées mesurent deux mètres, vivent à Barbuda dans une oasis réservée.
Au dix-neuvième siècle, pour arrêter la prolifération des reptiles venimeux on introduisit un petit mammifère féroce, la mangouste, d’ou la disparition des serpents. Les insectes sont rares tandis que les rainettes vertes, avec leur coassement typique, sont beaucoup plus répandues Les moutons, les vaches et les chèvres sont nombreux : ils furent introduits sur l’île par les premiers colons. Les fonds marins abritent des poissons de toutes les couleurs, que l’on aperçoit facilement en plongeant avec masque et tuba.
FLORA & FAUNA OF ANTIGUA
Antigua combines lush tropical vegetation, bright  owers and exotic fruits with ancient rainforest and rugged scrubland. The nature lover can hike unspoiled hillsides and remote beaches, explore the national parks and the frigate bird sanctuary or relax on a lounger and watch the busy lizards or the diving pelicans.
FLORA
Five centuries of European in uence have affected not only the island’s history but also its plant life which is permanently stamped with the passing of its foreign conquerors. Many species were brought over by the Europeans who introduced them from their other colonies. The native vegetation consists mainly of shrubs and includes rainforest plants like giant bamboo, rubber trees, mahogany, creepers and numerous varieties of orchid and climbing plants like philodendrons. On the coast grow acacia and  g trees, succulents and agaves. A common sight around the lagoons and hurricane holes is the mangrove whose roots help to hold onto sand and coral fragments, making it an essential part of sea ecology. Many of the island’s  owers are foreign, like the  amboyant which originated in Madagascar and Egypt, and hibiscus, both of which have settled in so well as to become emblems of the island. The beautiful bougainvillea was originally a Mediterranean plant but here comes in different sizes and beautiful bright colours. Coconut palms which are so much part of the image of the Caribbean were imported from India with the papaya and the mango. Almost all the island’s edible species come
from other parts. Captain Bligh of ‘Mutiny on the Bounty’ fame brought the breadfruit tree to the Antilles from Tahiti. He was transporting a cargo of saplings to plant on the islands in order to provide low-cost food for the slaves working on the sugar plantations. Sugar cane itself came from other tropical regions and replaced most of the area’s rainforest.
The avocado and the guava originated in Brazil, cocoa came from Central America and the banana was brought over from the Canaries. The earliest inhabitants of the Lesser Antilles cultivated cassava from which tapioca is made and it too played an important role in feeding the slaves cheaply.
One of the island’s indigenous trees is the manchineel. Its fruit, which looks like small green apples, has a pleasant scent but is inedible - it can cause violent gastro-intestinal upsets and can even be fatal to children.
WILDLIFE
One of the many species that can be found inland is the heron while on the coast look out for terns, pelicans and petrels. Frigate birds have a wingspan of up to 2 metres and their own nature reserve on Barbuda.
In the 19th century the mongoose was introduced to Antigua in order to control the spread of poisonous snakes which eventually disappeared altogether. Insects are rare whereas the croak of the green tree frog can be heard often. The island is home to cows, sheep and goats brought over by the  rst colonists and the ocean holds tropical  sh of all colours which can be seen easily with a mask and snorkel.
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