Biodiversity

The Natural Park houses 4 different types of ecosystems:  deep, pelagic, coral and insular. Coral reefs have developed in the Natural Park and have formed the islands referred to as distant islands : the islands situated on the Chesterfield and Bellona plateaus, the d’Entrecasteaux atolls, the Petrie islands and reefs, as well as the Astrolabe.  Walpole Island is a raised coral bloc while Matthew and Hunter are volcanic islands. 41 % of the coral reefs present in New Caledonia can be found in the Natural Park of the Coral Sea. They are exceptionally well-preserved. The Natural Park’s deep environments are all remarkable with more than 500 seamounts and almost 8 000 meters deep in the fosse des Nouvelles-Hébrides. One of the Natural Park of the Coral Sea’s particularities is that it acts as a passing, feeding and living area for numerous species. For example, Great Frigate Birds which nest in the Chesterfield Islands travel as far away as Papua New Guinea to feed; Great White Sharks move between New Caledonia, the Australian waters and New Zealand; Humpback Whales which cross the Pacific before heading South towards Antarctica; Finally, Green Turtles which lay in the Natural Park, feed either in the Greater Southern Lagoon or in the Australian seagrass meadows.

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Latest News

Atolls d'Entrecasteaux, mission Tictac (IRD) - (c) Mohsen Kayal, 2024.
28 January 2025
gouvernance

The Coral Sea Natural Park, which has been operating for a decade, recently underwent a transformation in its leadership structure.

Surveying a reef in the Coral sea Marine Park ©Daniela Ceccarelli
15 May 2019
Science

In April 2018, Parks Australia and James Cook University scientists began a three year program to monitor the health of some of Australia’s remotest and most pristine coral reefs in the Coral Sea Marine Park.

Entrecasteaux îlot Huon ©DAM-NC SPE
15 March 2019
Science environnement

 

 

 

A new five-year action plan for the Entrecasteaux Atolls, linked to the 2018-2022 natural park of the Coral sea management plan, replaces the existing management plan which concluded at the end of 2018.