Essayer OR - Gratuit
RETURN OF THE GIANTS
BBC Wildlife
|November 2024
After two decades of preparations, the island of Floreana in the Galápagos is ready to welcome back an iconic tortoise

I WAS WALKING DOWN A SANDY trail perforated by volcanic rocks - the sharp, pointy kind that ruin boots and twist ankles. The heat was making my feet heavy and had scorched the trees to skeletons. While I walked and talked with other members of the group, thirsty mockingbirds hopped between the - surrounding thickets.
I was on San Cristóbal, the easternmost island of the Galápagos, an archipelago born from volcanoes. Here, evolution takes place at such speed that scientists observe certain islands day and night.

My destination was a volcanic crater. Two craters now fused into one, its cool, muddy bowls are the perfect place for another Galápagos icon - the giant tortoise. Here, these creatures bathe, bask and, if they're lucky, breed.

San Cristóbal was once overrun by cats, rats and goats. Some snuck onto the island with pirates and whalers in the 1600s; others were intentionally brought here by settlers in the 1700s. The herbivores outcompeted the leisurely tortoises for food and carnivores feasted on their eggs, and the population nosedived. Fernando radioed the location to a team who would take care of the matter, and we pressed on.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition November 2024 de BBC Wildlife.
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