The New Island South Conservation Trust buys New Island North

Taken from Penguin News, Falkland Islands, V18. No 16. Friday, August 18, 2006.

The Trustees of the New Island South Conservation Trust are delighted to announce that they have recently completed the purchase of the New Island North Nature Reserve from Tony and Kim Chater, thus bringing the entire island into the Trust’s ownership.

The New Island South Conservation Trust (NISCT), although only formally established as a charity in 1995, has over a quarter of a century of wildlife study and conservation experience and currently plays a leading role in Falkland Islands environmental protection. From its base at the New Island settlement the Trust operates the only purpose-designed site for field studies in the Falkland Islands.

The Trust was the brainchild of Ian Strange MBE who was the owner of New Island South from 1971 until the property was acquired by the Trust in 1998. Since then he has been the Trust’s resident warden, overseeing major infrastructure developments and a very wide-ranging programme of international research into many species of wildlife, including Black-browed Albatross, Rockhopper Penguins, Thin-billed Prions, the Falklands Skua and Upland Geese.

HRH Prince Andrew visited the island in 2002 when he also formally opened the Geoffrey C Hughes Field Centre, named after the charity’s American benefactor.
It was also the Geoffrey C Hughes Trust that funded the recent purchase of the rest of the island from Mr and Mrs Chater.

The Chairman of the New Island Trustees, Air Vice-Marshal David Crwys-Williams, said:

“ We are thrilled that we have acquired the entire island and now have the opportunity to extend our important conservation and research projects across the whole property. We are grateful to Tony and Kim Chater for their cooperation in this project, and we are very pleased that they plan to remain on New Island as our tenants for a few years.”

New Island is a popular stop for many cruise ships visiting the Falklands, and will offer an even better experience for the many tourists from next season: with the help of a grant from the FCO’s Overseas Territories Environment Programme the stone building built by Captain Charles Barnard, stranded there for two years in 1812, has been restored as a Visitors’ Centre. Later this year it will be fitted out with displays about the island’s wildlife, the Trust’s conservation work and the history of the island.

The origins of the New Island South Conservation Trust (NISCT) go back to 1971 when the New Island Preservation Company bought the island and took steps to establish the property as a nature reserve.

When the island was divided in 1977 into New Island North and New Island South, Mr Ian Strange transferred the southern property to a private trust, and in 1993 the area was given official status as a Wildlife Sanctuary by the Falklands Islands Government.


In 1995 the NISCT was formed, with a Board of independent Trustees (see below) that subsequently acquired the southern part of the island including the settlement, jetty and airstrip.
Over the past 10 years, with the enormous help of Mr Ian Strange, the generosity of the US-based Geoffrey C Hughes Foundation and grants from the Falklands Island Government and the FCO, the Trust has undertaken major developments in New Island South:

· A substantial and well-equipped Field Station has been built that provides a large indoor workspace complete with laboratories, computer facilities, a library and herbarium as well as self-contained accommodation for two scientists.

· Since 1997 major research programmes undertaken by scientists from many nations have included studies of Black-browed Albatross, Rockhopper Penguins, Thin-billed Prions, Upland Geese, and Falkland Skuas. The research results are periodically published to a wide scientific community and presented to prestigious conferences worldwide.

· In the past year, a major refurbishment of one of the earliest stone building in the Falklands, built by the stranded Captain Barnard in 1812 and 1813, has been completed. This year it will be fitted out as a Visitors Centre for the many tourists landing from cruise ships, and include exhibits about the Trust’s work as well as the history of the island.

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Now under one ownership, New Island will become one entire wildlife reserve under the Trust, ensuring its protection for the future.
The map below shows the approximate postition of the original property divide between south and north. New Island as a whole covers an area of approximately 10,000 acres (4,000 ha), and important conservation research and projects which have been ongoing on New Island South, can now be extended to the North of the island.