Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Lord Howe Island Group' has mentioned 'Fauna' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Contents 1 Bioregion 2 History 2.1 1788xe2x80x931834: First European visits 2.2 1834xe2x80x931841: Settlement 2.3 1842xe2x80x931860: Trading provisions 2.4 1861xe2x80x931890: Scientific expeditions 2.5 1890xe2x80x931999 2.6 21st century 3 Demographics 4 Governance and land tenure 4.1 Kentia palm industry 4.2 Tourism 4.2.1 Facilities 4.2.2 Activities 5 Geography 5.1 Geological origins 5.2 Basalts and calcarenite 5.3 Climate 6 Flora and fauna 6.1 Plants 6.1.1 Communities and special plants 6.1.1.1 Images of native flora 6.2 Animals 6.2.1 Birds 6.2.2 List of endemic birds 6.2.3 Mammals, reptiles and amphibians 6.2.4 Invertebrates 6.2.5 Marine life 6.3 Conservation 6.3.1 Feral animals and plants 6.3.2 Climate change 7 Heritage listings 8 Sport 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 11.1 Attribution 12 Further reading 13 External links
Flora and fauna[edit]
[119] In geological terms at 7 million years old, Lord Howe Island is relatively young and was never part of any continent, its flora and fauna colonising the island from across the sea, carried by wind, water, or birds, possibly assisted at a geological time when other islands were exposed, enabling island hopping.
Images of native fauna Providence petrels on the summit of Mount Gower Woodhen by Neds Beach Road Masked booby with chick viewed off Malabar cliffs Coral skeleton on Little Island Beach
Introduced species that harmed Lord Howe's native flora and fauna, namely feral pigs, cats and goats, were eradicated by the early 2000s.
Importantly, this Act also aims to protect matters of national environmental significance, such as World Heritage properties, from impacts even if they originate outside the property or if the values of the property are mobile (as in fauna).