Hosnies Spring was known earlier but the unique ecosystem was noted in late 1980s. It was incorporated into the Christmas Island National Park in 1989, and listed on 11 December 1990 as Ramsar site 512, one of two such sites on the island and the smallest in the world.[2] In 2010 a proposal was made to increase the area of the Ramsar site to 202 ha. Justification for its Ramsar designation is because it:[3]
is an example of a type of unusual wetland unique to Christmas Island;
supports a unique assemblage of flora locally restricted to the one location, and additionally several endemic and vulnerable species;
is of special value for locally restricted species as well as several endemics.
Although some restricted phosphate mining occurs nearby, human activity has had little impact on the site.
The springs form a wetland supporting a unique 120,000-year-old stand of the mangrovesBruguiera gymnorhiza and Bruguiera sexangula.[4] The stand contains between 300 and 600 trees, including some of the largest Bruguiera ever recorded, several with trunks of more than 80cm diameter and with a canopy 30–40 m high. Several species of birds and crabs endemic to the island occur on the site.[3]