Sula Islands Regency


The Sula Islands Regency is one of the regencies in North Maluku province of Indonesia. It was originally formed on 25 February 2003, when it encompassed the three large islands comprising the Sula Archipelago, together with minor adjacent islands. However, the largest and most westerly of the three, Taliabu, was split off from the Sula Islands Regency on 14 December 2012 to form a separate regency.
The remaining two islands which now comprise the Regency are Sulabesi and Mangole. The residual regency covers a land area of 1,779.81 km2 and had a population of 85,215 at the 2010 Census and 104,082 at the 2020 Census; the official estimate as at mid 2024 was 105,095. The administrative capital is at the town of Sanana on the north part of the east coast of Sulabesi Island.

History

The Dutch built a fort on Sanana in 1652. Wallace visited the islands during an ornithological expedition in 1862.
Before Indonesian independence, the Sula Islands were also known as the Xulla Islands, with Taliabo as Xulla Taliabo, Sulabesi as Xulla Bessi, and Mangoli as Xulla Mangola.

Administration

Sula Islands Regency comprises twelve districts, tabulated below with their areas and populations at the 2010 Census and the 2020 Census, together with the official estimates as at mid 2024. The table also includes the locations of the district administrative centres, the number of administrative villages in each district, and its post code.
Kode
Wilayah
Name of
District
English nameArea
in
km2
Pop'n
Census
2010
Pop'n
Census
2020
Pop'n
Estimate
mid 2024
Admin
centre
No.
of
villages
Post
code
82.05.03Sulabesi BaratWest Sulabesi93.454,7075,5855,834Kabau Pantai697797
82.05.09Sulabesi SelatanSouth Sulabesi90.064,2985,5455,731Fuata597798
82.05.02Sanana116.7025,18333,99432,436Fogi1197795
82.05.07Sulabesi TengahCentral Sulabesi75.745,9297,2507,427Waiboga697799
82.05.08Sulabesi TimurEast Sulabesi81.843,1004,3504,444Balleha697795
82.05.18Sanana UtaraNorth Sanana77.065,6757,6228,307Pohea797796
Sulabesi Island534.8548,89264,34664,17941
82.05.01Mangoli TimurEast Mangoli206.084,3015,6135,347Waitina597793
82.05.11Mangoli TengahCentral Mangoli250.426,3817,6448,085Mangoli997793
82.05.10Mangoli Utara TimurNortheast Mangoli159.803,7774,7354,744Waisakai497793
82.05.06Mangoli Barat West Mangoli152.877,0847,1987,933Dofa797793
82.05.13Mangoli UtaraNorth Mangoli259.7710,1159,3739,305Falabisahaya797793
82.05.12Mangoli SelatanSouth Mangoli216.024,6655,1735,502Buya5-
Mangole Island1,244.9636,32339,73640,91637

Note: including offshore islands of Pulau Dodoku and Pulau Mancaril.

Economy

According to government data, Sula Islands Regency's food crops include vegetables, groundnuts, cassava, sweet potatoes, durian, mangosteen and mango. the area of agriculturally active land was 24743.56 hectares with production amounting to 33,608.62 tons per year. Taliabu-Sanana District is the main producer of cloves, nutmeg, cocoa, copra and other coconut products. Fishery production is very diverse with and estimated sustainable potential of 40,273.91 tonnes per year of which only 22.8 percent is currently exploited. Forestry is considered a potential industry with the natural forest-based Classification Map TGHK RTRWP suggesting a forest area of 471,951.53 hectares, but much of this is protected or hard to access, due to steep slopes and transportation logistics, and the islands' main plywood company, PT Barito Pacific Timber Group has closed. Industrial activity is very limited. There is a gold mine in East Mangoli District and coal mines are located in the peninsula of West Sulabesi District, East Taliabu and Sub Sanana. Reserves of coal are estimated around 10.4 million tonnes.

Tourism

The Indonesian Ministry of Tourism is ready to support the promotion of tourism destination potential on Sula Islands. Demographically located between the crossroads of Wakatobi and Raja Ampat tourist areas, it is ideally developed as marine tourism and special interest tourism for diving enthusiasts.
One of the support is Maksaira Festival at Wai Ipa Beach to Bajo Village Beach. On 2018 the festival as a cultural and marine tourism attraction event has entered the third year and will be listed as MURI record breaking for the largest grouper fishing participant targeted by 3000 participants in 2018, where year 2017 followed by 1700 participants.

Fauna

The following species are native to the Sula Islands:
  • Buru babirusa Babyrousa babyrussa
  • Banggai cuscus Strigocuscus pelengensis
  • Sula rat Rattus elaphinus
  • Sulawesi flying fox Acerodon celebensis
  • Lesser short-nosed fruit bat Cynopterus brachyotis
  • Greenish naked-backed fruit bat Dobsonia viridis
  • Long-tongued nectar bat Macroglossus minimus
  • Pallas's tube-nosed bat Nyctimene cephalotes
  • Ashy-headed flying fox Pteropus caniceps
  • Sulawesi rousette Rousettus celebensis
  • Swift fruit bat Thoopterus nigrescens
  • Small Asian sheath-tailed bat Emballonura alecto
  • Fawn leaf-nosed bat Hipposideros cervinus
  • Small bent-winged bat Miniopterus pusillus
  • Sula megapode Megapodius bernsteinii, status vulnerable
Introduced species include: