Yesterday's total was the highest recorded for a single day in recent years as calm conditions encouraged people smugglers to leave Libya with boats stuffed with as many paying passengers on board as possible.
The first groups began arriving at Italian ports today afternoon. Among them were a new-born baby and 20 unaccompanied minors on a Doctors without Borders (MSF) ship that docked at Vibo Valentia.
Boats from the Italian coastguard, navy and customs police all took part in the rescue operation alongside Norway's Siem Pilot and Ireland's Niamh, ships serving with the EU's Triton search and rescue mission.
Britain's Enterprise, which is part of fledgling European Union (EU) naval mission EUNAVFOR Med intended to take on people smugglers, also got involved, picking up some 440 migrants from four inflatables.
To date, however, it only has a mandate to collect intelligence and, even if it gets a green light to start intercepting smugglers' ships, it will only be able to do so in international waters.
At present the vast majority of distress calls sent out from migrant boats come from inside Libyan territorial waters, where EUNAVFOR could not act without cover from a UN resolution.
There were no reports of migrants having died during yesterday's operations or prior to the rescue boats arriving.
The latest arrivals will lift to more than 108,000 the number of asylum seekers and other migrants to have arrived in Italy this year.
More than 150,000 have landed in Greece, most of them with the aim of traveling on to northern Europe via the Balkans.
