- Puffin Island, Anglesey
Puffin Island (Ynys Seiriol in Welsh (gbmaprim|SH649821|SH 649 821)) is an uninhabited island off the eastern tip of
Anglesey ,Wales at Latitude 53 31 69 N and Longitude 04 02 54 W. It was formerly known as "Priestholm" in English and "Ynys Lannog" in Welsh.Puffin Island is the ninth largest island off the coast of Wales. It is a piece of Carboniferous limestone, 58 m above sea level at its highest point and has steep cliffs on all sides. It has an area of 0.28 km². The island is privately owned by the Baron Hill estate and landing is not allowed without special permission. Edwin Morris, who owns "Puffin Island", paid out £12.4 million pounds for it in 1992 and is in the process of making the island a rat free zone to restore the puffins.
History
The Welsh name of Ynys Seiriol refers to Saint
Seiriol , who established a monastic settlement on the island and on Trwyn Du (Penmon Point) on the mainland opposite the island in the 6th century. Seiriol is said to have been buried on the island. A monastery still existed on the island in the late 12th century and was mentioned byGiraldus Cambrensis who visited the area in1188 . He claimed that whenever there was strife within the community of monks a plague of mice would devour all their food. KingCadwallon ap Cadfan of Gwynedd is said to have sheltered here in around630 when fleeing an invasion fromNorthumbria .Llywelyn the Great issued two charters in 1221 and 1237 confirming the monks, usually called "canons", in possession of the island and the church and manor of Penmon on the mainland of Anglesey. The ruins of several ecclesiastical buildings are still visible on the island, including the remains of a 12th century church.Much later a
telegraph station was built on the north-eastern tip of the island. It is now disused.Wildlife
The island is a Special Protection Area (SPA), particularly because of the
Great Cormorant colony of over 750 pairs, making it one of the largest colonies in theBritish Isles . It also has good numbers of Guillemot, Razorbill, Shag and Kittiwake nesting, and in recent years small numbers ofCommon Eider andBlack Guillemot . The Puffins from which the island gets its modern English name bred in considerable numbers at one time, with up to 2,000 pairs recorded. Remains of a 'factory' or processing site can still be seen near the summit of the island, where puffins were 'pickled' and packed for export in the 19th century. TheBrown Rat was introduced accidentally to the island, probably in the late 19th century, and reduced this population to a very few pairs. A programme of poisoning these rats started in 1998 by theCountryside Council for Wales appears to have eradicated them, and the Puffin population has shown an increase since that date.At one time the island was heavily grazed by rabbits, but these were wiped out by an outbreak of
myxomatosis , leading to the growth of dense vegetation, particularly Common Elder ("Sambucus nigra").The strong currents around the island provide for an abundance of marine life, particularly on the north coast where the depths reach 15 metres. There is one identified wreck, a steamship "The Pioneer", which ran ashore in 1878 with a cargo of iron bars when the tow lines to it broke following its rescue from engine failure near The Skerries. [cite book |title= Underwater Guide to North Wales Vol. 2|last= Holden|first= Chris|year=2008 |publisher= Calgo Publications|isbn= 978-0-9545066-1-2|pages= p158-167]
References
* [http://www.jncc.gov.uk/default.aspx?page=2083 Site description from the UK SPA network]
*"Faster That The Wind, The Liverpool to Holyhead Telegraph", Frank Large, an avid publication ISBN 0952102099
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