Brève description
Située à l’extrémité ouest du continent australien, la baie Shark, avec ses îles et les terres qui l’entourent, possède trois caractéristiques naturelles exceptionnelles : ses vastes herbiers marins, les plus étendus (4 800 km²) et les plus riches du monde, sa population de dugongs, ou « vaches marines », et ses stromatolites, colonies d’algues qui édifient des monticules et sont parmi les plus anciennes formes de vie sur terre. La baie Shark abrite en outre cinq espèces de mammifères menacées.
Shark Bay, Western Australia
At the most westerly point of the Australian continent, Shark Bay, with its islands and the land surrounding it, has three exceptional natural features: its vast sea-grass beds, which are the largest (4,800 km2) and richest in the world; its dugong (‘sea cow’) population; and its stromatolites (colonies of algae which form hard, dome-shaped deposits and are among the oldest forms of life on earth). Shark Bay is also home to five species of endangered mammals.
Située à l’extrémité ouest du continent australien, la baie Shark, avec ses îles et les terres qui l’entourent, possède trois caractéristiques naturelles exceptionnelles : ses vastes herbiers marins, les plus étendus (4 800 km²) et les plus riches du monde, sa population de dugongs, ou « vaches marines », et ses stromatolites, colonies d’algues qui édifient des monticules et sont parmi les plus anciennes formes de vie sur terre. La baie Shark abrite en outre cinq espèces de mammifères menacées.
شارك باي، أستراليا الغربية
يقع الخليج على الطرف الغربي للقارة الأسترالية بجزره والأراضي التي تحيط به وله ثلاث سمات طبيعية واستثنائية: مساحات الأعشاب البحرية الواسعة وهي الأوسع (4800 كلم مربع) والأغنى في العالم، ومجموعة الدودنغ (البقرة البحرية)، والستروماتوليت أو مستوطنات الطحالب المائية التي تشكّل تلالاً وهي من أقدم أنواع الحياة على سطح الأرض. يضمّ شارك باي خمسة أجناس من الثدييات المهددة بالإنقراض.
Source: UNESCO/BPI
西澳大利亚鲨鱼湾
此鲨鱼湾位于澳洲大陆最西端,由许多岛屿及周边陆地组成,有三个独具一格的自然特点:拥有世界上最大的海床(4800平方公里)和最丰富的海草资源;拥有世界上数量最多的儒艮(海牛);拥有大量叠层石(叠层石是由大量海藻形成的硬质圆形沉积物,是地球上最古老的生命形式之一)。鲨鱼湾还是五种濒危哺乳动物的栖息地。
Source: UNESCO/ERI
Залив Шарк, Западная Австралия
Залив Шарк, с прилегающими островами и береговой зоной на самой западной оконечности Австралии, знаменит тремя феноменами: заросли донных водорослей (самые обширные и богатые в мире, покрывающие площадь 480 тыс. га); крупная популяция дюгоня (более 10 тыс. особей); и строматолиты (известковые образования с округлой вершиной, образованные в результате жизнедеятельности колониальных водорослей и являющиеся одной из древнейших на Земле форм жизни). В районе залива Шарк отмечено также пять редких видов млекопитающих.
Source: UNESCO/ERI
Bahía Shark (Australia Occidental)
Situada en el extremo occidental de Australia, la Bahía Shark y sus islas y tierras circundantes poseen tres características naturales excepcionales: los más vastos (4.800 km²) y ricos herbarios marinos del planeta; una importante población de dugongos; y una gran abundancia de estromatolitos formados por colonias de algas, que son una de las formas de vida más antiguas del planeta. La bahía alberga también cinco especies de mamíferos en peligro de extinción.
Source: UNESCO/ERI
西オーストラリアのシャーク湾
source: NFUAJ
© Evergreen
Description longue
[Uniquement en anglais]
At the most westerly point of the Australian continent, Shark Bay, with its remarkable coastal scenery and islands, has three exceptional natural features: its vast seagrass beds, which are the largest (4,800 km2) and most species-rich in the world; its dugong population (estimated at 11,000); and its stromatolites (colonies of algae that form hard, dome-shaped deposits and are among the oldest forms of life on Earth).
The inland terrestrial landscape of Shark Bay is predominantly one of low rolling hills interspersed with birridas inland saltpans. Shark Bay itself is a large shallow embayment, approximately 13,000 km2 in area with an average depth of 9m, enclosed by a series of islands. Influx of oceanic water is through channels: Naturaliste Channel in the north and South Passage in the south.
The outstanding feature of the bay is the steep gradient in salinities. It ranges from oceanic in the northern and western parts of the bay through metahaline to hypersaline. The salinity gradient has created three biotic zones that have a marked influence on the distribution of marine organisms within the bay.
For almost 3,000 million years (i.e. 85% of the history of life) only microbes populated the Earth. The only macroscopic evidence of their activities is preserved by stromatolites, which reached their greatest diversity 850 million years ago. The stromatolites encrypt evidence of the biology of the microbial communities that created them and the nature of the environments in which they grew. They dominated the shallow seas and formed extensive reef tracts rivaling those of modern coral reefs.
Although microbes have not declined in importance, their activity in building organo-sedimentary structures has, it being more efficient to occupy niches in reefs constructed by faster growing organisms, or indeed to occupy positions within the organisms themselves. Consequently stromatolites and other microbialites have declined in importance over this period, although they have remained locally significant in environments such as Hamelin Pool in Shark bay , where biotic diversity has been limited for one reason or another. The stromatolites and microbial mats of Hamelin Pool were the first modern, living examples to be recognized as comparable to those that inhabited the early seas.
Modern day analogues such as occur in great diversity and abundance in Hamelin Pool
greatly assist in the understanding of the nature and evolution of the Earth's biosphere until the early Cambrian. The Hamelin Pool stromatolites are considered to be a 'classic site' for the study and classification of stromatolitic microbiolites, as the morphology and biology of diverse living types can be studied through a range of environments.
The Shark Bay region is an area of major zoological importance, primarily due to the isolation habitats on peninsulas and islands being isolated from the disturbance that has occurred elsewhere. Of the 26 species of endangered Australian mammals, five are found on Bernier and Dorre Islands. These are the boodie (burrowing bettong), rufous hare-wallaby, banded hare-wallaby, the Shark Bay mouse and the western barred bandicoot. The Shark Bay region has a rich avifauna with over 230 species, or 35%, of Australia's bird species having been recorded. The site is renowned for its marine fauna, the population of about 11,000 dugong, for example, is one of the largest in the world. Humpback and southern right whales use the bay as a migratory staging post. Bottlenose dolphin occur in the bay, and green turtle and loggerhead turtle nest on the beaches. Large numbers of sharks including bay whaler, tiger shark and hammerhead are readily observed. There is also an abundant population of rays, including the manta ray.
The record of aboriginal occupation of Shark Bay extends to 22,000 years BP. At that time most of the area was dry land, rising sea levels flooding Shark Bay between 8000 BP and 6000 BP. A considerable number of aboriginal midden sites have been found, especially on Peron Peninsula and Dirk Hartog Island which provide evidence of some of the foods gathered from the waters and nearby land areas. Shark Bay was named by the English buccaneer William Dampier in the late 17th century. It is the site of the first recorded European landing in Western Australia, with the visit of Dirk Hartog in 1616, followed by William Dampier in 1699.
Source : UNESCO/CLT/WHC