Natural beauty and wildlife spots in Australia, Japan and Kenya have won Unesco world heritage status, the UN cultural body said.

The Paris-based body added the Ningaloo Coast in Western Australia, Japan’s remote Ogasawara Islands and the Kenya Lake System in the Rift Valley province, to its heritage list, a valuable tourism-boosting asset.

The 32,000-hectare Kenyan lake district is home to rhinos, giraffes and lions.

It is also “the single most important foraging site for the lesser flamingo anywhere, and a major nesting and breeding ground for great white pelicans,” Unesco said.

The remote Ningaloo Coast boasts a big reef and sea turtles and is the scene of an annual gathering of white whales, it added, in a statement. The Ogasawara Islands, known in English as the Bonin Islands, are a cluster in the Pacific a thousand kilometres southeast of the Japanese mainland, and home to numerous animal species and hundreds of native plants.

These include “the Bonin Flying Fox, a critically endangered bat, and 195 endangered bird species”, Unesco said.

Unesco’s World Heritage Committee will be meeting to consider, among others, bids by the tiny Pacific archipelagos of Micronesia and Palau, Barbados, Jamaica, Congo and the United Arab Emirates for their first listings.

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