Conservation Firsthand

Conservation Firsthand

Join Shannon as she tracks tigers – the largest of all cats.
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Adopt a Blue-Footed Booby

Adopt a Blue-Footed Booby

Make a symbolic Blue-Footed Booby adoption to help save some of the world's most endangered animals from extinction and support WWF's conservation efforts. Adopt Now!

The Galápagos

The world’s most treasured islands

It is nearly impossible to overstate the importance of the Galápagos as a scientific and natural treasure. These islands hold untold volumes of information on unique species and evolutionary processes. With their sparkling blue waters and jet-black cliffs, the islands are a magnificent sight to behold. They lie in the eastern Pacific Ocean, 600 miles from the mainland. Like all oceanic archipelagos, or groups of islands, the 13 large islands and more than 100 smaller islands, islets and rocks were formed by underwater volcanoes millions of years ago.

International Recognition

In 1959 the Galápagos became Ecuador’s first national park, and in 1978 the area was declared a World Heritage Site. In 1984, the archipelago was added to the World Network of Biosphere Reserves under UNESCO’s Man and the Biosphere Program.

Meet the team!

WWF's vision: To ensure ecological integrity, economic prosperity and social equity for the future of the islands and the people who live here.

  • The place. An oceanic Archipelago of 13 large islands and more than 100 smaller ones holds the secrets of evolutionary processes. With an array of terrains created by different elevations and wind patterns, the Galápagos encompasses deserts with forests of cacti, subtropical forests harboring giant tortoises, lush cloud forests with towering scalesia trees, and wetlands cloaked in ferns and grasses.
  • The species. The islands and rich waters are home to nearly 9,000 species, most found nowhere else and adapting undisturbed since prehistoric times—the only penguin in the northern hemisphere, the only ocean-going lizard, plants that reproduce without pollination. Species occur in huge concentrations: Hundreds of marine iguanas and up to a million birds can be seen at once.
  • The people. People are the new species here, having first set foot on the islands in the 1800s and arriving in greater numbers in the 1920s. Local livelihoods—farming, fishing, and tourism—depend on nature. Today, in response to a burgeoning tourism trade, more and more people are migrating to the islands. Since 1980, the population has increased tenfold and is now over 28,000.

Related Global Markets

Climate Change | Forests | Fishing | Aquaculture 

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Where In The World?

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More on the Galapagos

Fuller Symposium 2008

Biofuels: Which are More Sustainable?
View the webcast from the 2008 Symposium here

Multimedia

Watch a Video on the Galapagos

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Galapagos Photo Gallery

Galapagos

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Expedition Diary

WWF Experts

Lauren Spurrier

Managing Director
Galapagos

"Economics and the way people interact with the environment is the crux of the solution in the Galapagos -- and the challenge."

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Travel to Galápagos with WWF

Travel to the Galápagos Islands with WWF.

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