As of January 2025, roughly ******* inhabitants were living on ************* Tenerife had the largest number of inhabitants at *******. Overall, the population of Spain in 2025, by gender and autonomous community shows that the ************** were the seventh-largest autonomous community in Spain when ranked by population with **** million male and **** million female inhabitants. The most populous autonomous communities were *********, *********, and ******. The largest age group in the Canary Islands was that made of people aged between 50 and 54, accounting for ******* inhabitants.
The largest age groups in the Canary Islands as of January 2025 were those between 45 and 54 years old. Specifically, those aged between 50 and 54 years old exceeded 201,000. Tenerife is the community's island with the largest number of inhabitants.
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Spain Population: Canarias: Santa Crus de Tenerife data was reported at 1,018,304.000 Person in 2017. This records an increase from the previous number of 1,007,641.000 Person for 2016. Spain Population: Canarias: Santa Crus de Tenerife data is updated yearly, averaging 1,001,900.000 Person from Dec 1997 (Median) to 2017, with 21 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 1,029,789.000 Person in 2010 and a record low of 780,152.000 Person in 1997. Spain Population: Canarias: Santa Crus de Tenerife data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by National Statistics Institute. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Spain – Table ES.G001: Population: at 1st of January.
Table of INEBase Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Population by municipality and sex. Annual. Municipalities. Official population figures of the Spanish Municipalities: Revision of the Municipal Register
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Analysis of ‘Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Population by municipality and sex. DPOP (API identifier: 2892)’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from http://data.europa.eu/88u/dataset/urn-ine-es-tabla-t3-29-2892 on 19 January 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
Table of INEBase Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Population by municipality and sex. Annual. Municipalities. Official population figures of the Spanish Municipalities: Revision of the Municipal Register
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
ambos-sexos born-abroad born-in-spain_-different-autonomous-community both-sexes continuous-register-statistics estadi_stica-del-padro_n-continuo estadi_sticas females formentera fuerteventura gomera-la gran-canaria hierro-el hombres ibiza islands islas lanzarote males mallorca menorca misma-ccaa_-distinta-provincia misma-isla_-distinto-municipio misma-provincia_-distinta-isla mismo-municipio mujeres nacidos-en-el-extranjero nacidos-en-espan_a_-distinta-ccaa palma-la relacio_n-lugar-de-nacimiento-y-de-residencia relation-place-of-birth-and-of-residence same-autonomous-community_-different-province same-island_-different-municipality same-municipality same-province_-different-island sex sexo statistics tenerife total total-balears-illes total-canarias total-palmas-las total-santa-cruz-de-tenerife
The Canary Island of Tenerife welcomed around 5.8 million tourists in 2022 including foreigners and Spanish residents from the mainland. In comparison to 2021, the number of visitors grew by over 110 percent, reaching pre-pandemic levels.
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Population and Housing Censuses: Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Households by size. National.
In 2023, approximately 14 million international tourists visited the Canary Islands in Spain, which represents an increase of roughly 13 percent versus the previous year. In 2010s, the record number of visitors in this Spanish archipelago was set in 2017.
Eight islands with lots of options for tourists
The Canary Islands, or the Canaries, are a group of islands off the Northwestern coast of Africa and one of Spain’s 17 autonomous communities. The archipelago is made up of eight inhabited islands: Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, Fuerteventura, La Palma, La Gomera, El Hierro and La Graciosa. Tenerife is most visited island, followed by Gran Canaria and Lanzarote, all popular vacation travel destinations, especially for European holidaymakers.
Main source markets
The Canaries are the third most visited Spanish region after the Balearic Islands and Catalonia. The UK and Germany are two key visitor markets for the islands. Along with France they make up the three leading international tourist markets visiting Spain. Spanish residents also commonly visit the islands for domestic trips (494520).
As with arrivals of international tourists, the visitor expenditure has increased significantly due to a rapid recovery from the coronavirus crisis. In 2022, foreign tourists who visited the Canary Islands spent more than they did in 2019.
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Evolutionary molecular studies of island radiations may lead to insights in the role of vicariance, founder events, population size and drift in the processes of population differentiation. We evaluate the degree of population genetic differentiation and fixation of the Canary Islands blue tit subspecies complex using microsatellite markers and aim to get insights in the population history using coalescence based methods. The Canary Island populations were strongly genetically differentiated and had reduced diversity with pronounced fixation including many private alleles. In population structure models, the relationship between the central island populations (La Gomera, Tenerife and Gran Canaria) and El Hierro was difficult to disentangle whereas the two European populations showed consistent clustering, the two eastern islands (Fuerteventura and Lanzarote) and Morocco weak clustering, and La Palma a consistent unique lineage. Coalescence based models suggested that the European mainland forms an outgroup to the Afrocanarian population, a split between the western island group (La Palma and El Hierro) and the central island group, and recent splits between the three central islands, and between the two eastern islands and Morocco, respectively. It is clear that strong genetic drift and low level of concurrent gene flow among populations have shaped complex allelic patterns of fixation and skewed frequencies over the archipelago. However, understanding the population history remains challenging; in particular, the pattern of extreme divergence with low genetic diversity and yet unique genetic material in the Canary Island system requires an explanation. A potential scenario is population contractions of a historically large and genetically variable Afrocanarian population, with vicariance and drift following in the wake. The suggestion from sequence-based analyses of a Pleistocene extinction of a substantial part of North Africa and a Pleistocene/Holocene eastward re-colonisation of western North Africa from the Canaries remains possible.
In 2022, the United Kingdom was the most important tourism source market for the Canary Island of Tenerife. Close to 2.3 million British tourists visited this Spanish island that year, roughly three times the number of Spanish tourists from the mainland.
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Origin-destination matrix that shows the relationships between the places of origin and destination of the trips made by the population using public transport on the island of Tenerife. It is a structured collection of data that records all the information of a person's journey by public transport, from the initial stop to the final, including transfers. The data in this matrix comes from the public transport service provided by: Tenerife Interurban Transport - TITSA, Metropolitano de Tenerife - MTSA and La Esperanza Transport - TLE.
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Population and Housing Censuses: Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Units by unit type. National.
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Official population figures of the Spanish Municipalities: Revision of the Municipal Register: Santa Cruz de Tenerife: Population by municipality and sex. Annual. Municipalities.
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人口:加那利群岛:圣克鲁斯德特内里费在12-01-2017达1,018,304.000人,相较于12-01-2016的1,007,641.000人有所增长。人口:加那利群岛:圣克鲁斯德特内里费数据按年更新,12-01-1997至12-01-2017期间平均值为1,001,900.000人,共21份观测结果。该数据的历史最高值出现于12-01-2010,达1,029,789.000人,而历史最低值则出现于12-01-1997,为780,152.000人。CEIC提供的人口:加那利群岛:圣克鲁斯德特内里费数据处于定期更新的状态,数据来源于Instituto Nacional de Estadística,数据归类于Global Database的西班牙 – 表 ES.G001:人口:1月1日。
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Original provider: ADS Biodiversidad
Dataset credits:
Data provider
ADS Biodiversidad
Originating data center
Satellite Tracking and Analysis Tool (STAT)
Project partner
Asociación para el Desarrollo Sostenible y Conservación de la Biodiversidad (ADS Biodiversidad)
Departamento de Biología de la Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
Centro de Recuperación de Fauna Silvestre del Cabildo de Gran Canaria
Centro de Recuperación de Fauna Silvestre La Tahonilla del Cabildo de Tenerife
Project sponsor or sponsor description
Fundación Biodiversidad del Ministerio de Agricultura, Alimentación y Medio Ambiente
Abstract:
Español
En las aguas de las islas Canarias (este del Atlántico) se pueden observar diferentes especies de tortugas marinas. Una de ellas es la tortuga verde (Chelonia mydas), menos frecuente que la tortuga boba (Caretta caretta), y de la que se dispone de muy poca información.
La ONG ADS Biodiversidad desarrolla actualmente un proyecto centrado en la tortuga verde y del que forma parte este programa de marcaje con transmisor. Dicho proyecto pretende determinar el origen de estos ejemplares, conocer su distribución en esta zona, qué tipo de hábitats están usando, y si están ligados o no a áreas con alguna figura de protección como, por ejemplo, la red Natura 2000. Además, se identificarán las principales presiones y amenazas a las que están expuestas estas tortugas.
Los resultados obtenidos se divulgarán entre la población local, siendo para muchos desconocida su presencia en estas aguas, incluso para algunos profesionales como pescadores y buceadores con los que interaccionan directamente.
*Título completo del proyecto: La tortuga verde (Chelonia mydas) y la red Natura 2000 en Canarias.
English
Several species of sea turtles can be observed in waters off the Canary Islands (Eastern Atlantic). One of them is the green turtle (Chelonia mydas), less frequent than the loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta), and with little information.
The NGO ADS Biodiversidad is currently developing a project based on the green turtle and this satellite tracking programme forms part of it. The aims of this project are to determine the origin of these individuals, know their distribution in this area, determine the habitats that they are using and define if they are linked or not to protected areas (e.g. Natura 2000 network). Furthermore, the main pressures and threats that are affecting to this species will be determined.
Results of this project will be disclosed among the local population, that poorly know the presence of the species in Canarian waters, even for some professionals that interact directly with them (e.g. fishermen and divers).
Project title: The green turtle (Chelonia mydas) and the Natura 2000 network in the Canary Islands.
Supplemental information: Visit STAT's project page for additional information.
This dataset is a summarized representation of the telemetry locations aggregated per species per 1-degree cell.
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Table of INEBase Santa Cruz de Tenerife by municipalities and demographic phenomenon . Vital Statistics: Deaths Statistics
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DPOH OPERATION De facto Population figures from 1900 until 1991: Santa Cruz Tenerife. Annual. Municipalities.
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Dataset of seed mesures for Orchis canariensis and Orchis patens used in the publication:
"SEED MICROMORPHOLOGY SUPPORTS SPECIES DELIMITATION OF ORCHIS CANARIENSIS (ORCHIDACEAE), AN ENDEMIC ORCHID FROM CANARY ISLANDS" - Nature Conservation Research
By Jacopo Calevo, Miriam Bazzicalupo, Cristina González-Montelongo, Daniel Rodríguez González, Laura Cornara
Abstract:
Geographic isolation is one of the primary drivers of speciation, but islands remain a reservoir of overlooked and understudied endemic species. In this study, we collected seed micromorphological data from Orchis canariensis (Orchidaceae), a declining species occurring only in Canary Islands (Spain), whose taxonomy was debated in the past decades. The aim of the study was to detect seed micromorphological traits in support of species delimitation by means of light and scanning electron microscopy. Seeds from a population in Tenerife resulted to be clavate with a cell number in the longitudinal axis varying from five to seven. Seeds showed straight to sinuous anticlinal walls and no ornamentations in the periclinal walls. Average seed length was 313.66 ± 44.78 µm and average width 184.31 ± 30.26 µm, with a ratio of 1.72 ± 0.25, while embryo length and width were 157.18 ± 35.21 µm and 125.43 ± 25.92 µm respectively. However, despite the affinities with the sister species, Orchis patens, quantitative and qualitative seed traits supported species delimitation recently proposed by means of molecular biology. Taken together, our results confirmed the importance of seed micromorphology in support of taxonomical studies.
Hospitality business and travel agencies in the Canary Islands employed more than 125 thousand people in 2021, which shows a decline of -7.4 percent versus the previous year. This was the second consecutive decline in the employment on tourism in the Spanish autonomous community, after a steady increase throughout the past decade.
As of January 2025, roughly ******* inhabitants were living on ************* Tenerife had the largest number of inhabitants at *******. Overall, the population of Spain in 2025, by gender and autonomous community shows that the ************** were the seventh-largest autonomous community in Spain when ranked by population with **** million male and **** million female inhabitants. The most populous autonomous communities were *********, *********, and ******. The largest age group in the Canary Islands was that made of people aged between 50 and 54, accounting for ******* inhabitants.