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Rapa

Country/Territory French Polynesia
Area 0 km2
Altitude 0 - 0 m
Priority -
Habitat loss -
Knowledge -

General characteristics

Rapa (40 km2, maximum altitude 630 m) is in the Austral (or Tubuai) Islands of French Polynesia (see also EBAs 211-214). Vegetation includes tropical and secondary rain forest, and savanna which develops as a result of fires and the browsing of goats and cattle. Rapa is a Secondary Area because of its single-island endemic, Rapa Fruit-dove Ptilinopus huttoni, which is confined to less than 3 km2 of the remaining fragmented forest, and was estimated to number 274 birds in 1989-1990. The main threat to it is further loss and degradation of habitat, although hunting and predation by cats and/or rats may also have an effect (Thibault and Varney 1991). The species is classified as threatened (Vulnerable) on account of its tiny range and population.

Restricted-range species


Species IUCN Red List category
Rapa Fruit-dove (Ptilinopus huttoni) CR

Important Bird & Biodiversity Areas (IBAs)
Country IBA Name IBA Book Code
French Polynesia Rapa PF021

Threat and conservation


Recommended citation
BirdLife International (2024) Endemic Bird Area factsheet: Rapa. Downloaded from https://datazone.birdlife.org/eba/factsheet/435 on 23/11/2024.