Channel Islands National Park - California
Established March 5, 1980
249,354 acres
Strung along a stretch of California coast are five separate pieces of land surrounded by 1,252 square nautical miles of sea. Channel Islands National Park and Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary protect these islands, the sea around them, and a dazzling array of wildlife.
Two of the islands in this unusual park, Anacapa and Santa Barbara, were earlier designated a national monument, a refuge for nesting seabirds, seals, sea lions, and other long-threatened marine animals. When those islands and three others were joined in a national park, the mission of refuge continued.
Today the park manages a long-term ecological research program that may be the best in the park system. The marine sanctuary, also established in 1980, extends for 6 nautical miles around each island. Among the resources it protects is a giant kelp forest with nearly a thousand kinds of fish and marine plants. The park and sanctuary also guard the area from encroachment by another kind of island—the seagoing oil rigs of the Santa Barbara Channel.
About 70 different species of plants grow only on the Channel Islands, and some plants exist on but one of them. The islands shelter the only breeding colony of northern fur seals south of Alaska. To help native animals, park managers have gotten rid of such non-native species as burros, rabbits, and house cats gone feral. Efforts to eradicate black rats—descendants of ancestors that jumped ship—have been less successful.
A permanent ranger resides on each island. Reservations are needed for camping. Fishing and diving are strictly regulated and airplanes are asked to keep their distance.
Chumash Indians lived on the Channel Islands until the early 19th century. They traveled from island to island in plank canoes caulked with tar from oil seeps. The tar from such seeps still appears on mainland beaches, reminding strollers of the reason for the oil rigs on the horizon. |