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How many Caribbean islands do the Dutch own?

The Dutch Caribbean Species Register covers the biodiversity of the six islands in the Caribbean that are part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. These six islands comprise Aruba, Bonaire, Curaçao, Saba, Sint Eustatius, and Sint Maarten.



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One island and two countries! Between the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea, St. Martin is half French, half Dutch. But this pocket island is more than that: a real cultural melting pot!

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Bermuda is an internally self-governing British overseas territory with a parliamentary government. Under its 1968 constitution, the British monarch, represented by the governor, is the head of state.

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Barbados was first occupied by the British in 1627 and remained a British colony until internal autonomy was granted in 1961. The Island gained full independence in 1966, and maintains ties to the Britain monarch represented in Barbados by the Governor General. It is a member of the Commonwealth.

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Three Caribbean polities are countries (Dutch: landen) within the Kingdom of the Netherlands: Aruba, Curaçao, and Sint Maarten. The Netherlands is the fourth and largest constituent country in the Kingdom. Sint Maarten comprises the southern half of the island of Saint Martin.

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