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Learn about this critically endangered species.
- Date:
- 2011
- Language:
- Spanish
Study reveals urgent need for large scale invasive species management to prevent extinction of endemic forest in the Galapagos Islands
Study reveals urgent need for large scale invasive species management to prevent extinction of endemic forest in the Galapagos Islands
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Scalesia forests once thrived on the Galapagos Islands, forming a unique humid ecosystem for plants, insects, giant tortoises and birds. Today, only 1% of the forests’ original distribution remains, with several endemic species, including the Scalesia themselves, struggling to survive. We are working to restore this important habitat and given the rapid rate of forest loss, it is a race against time.
Scalesia forests once thrived on the Galapagos Islands, forming a unique humid ecosystem for plants, insects, giant tortoises and birds. Today, only 1% of the forests’ original distribution remains, with several endemic species, including the Scalesia themselves, struggling to survive. We are working to restore this important habitat and given the rapid rate of forest loss, it is a race against time.