Giant tortoise reintroduced to island after almost 200 years


Giant tortoise reintroduced to island after almost 200 years
Giant tortoise reintroduced to island after almost 200 years

In a strange scientific discovery, a tortoise returned to its native island after 200 years.

A subspecies driven to extinction by hungry whalers returns after a ‘back breeding’ programme using partial descendants.

The Floreana giant tortoise (Chelonoidis niger niger), a subspecies of the giant tortoise once found across the Galápagos, was driven to extinction in the 1840s by whalers who removed thousands from the volcanic island to provide a living larder during their hunting voyages.

Remarkably, 158 juvenile giant tortoises descended from the Floreana subspecies have been returned to the island in a vital step for the largest ecological restoration project undertaken on the Pacific Ocean archipelago.

Giant tortoises, the life-giving engineers of remote small island ecosystems, are plodding over the Galápagos Island of Floreana for the first time in more than 180 years.

A relic population of giant tortoises discovered on Wolf Volcano in the north of Isabela Island in 2008 was found to be descended in part from the Floreana population.

Most of the Wolf volcano tortoises had domed shells like those living on Isabela’s other volcanoes to the south, but some had a saddleback-shaped carapace more typical of the tortoises that evolved on Floreana.

A captive “back-breeding” program began in 2017, for which 23 hybrid tortoises most closely related to the Floreana subspecies were chosen to recreate it as genetically close to the original as possible.

More than 600 hatchlings had been born by 2025, and several hundred grew large enough to be returned to their ancestral island, and the male tortoises can reach nearly 1.5 meters or 5 ft in length.

The reintroduction has been brought about by the Floreana Ecological Restoration Project, a partnership between the Galápagos national park directorate and a number of charities working closely with the island’s 160 residents.

An invasive species eradication programme, which began in 2023 and has removed most of the rats and feral cats on the island, paved the way for the tortoises’ return.

The Galapagos rail has since been rediscovered on Floreana after not being recorded since Darwin’s first visit, and there has been a resurgence in populations of ground finches and native geckos, lizards and snails.

Verónica Mora, a Floreana community representative, said of the tortoises’ return, “This moment marks an important step toward a future where conservation and community well-being go hand in hand, because our livelihoods, from tourism to agriculture and fishing, depend on the health of this island.”

The island’s farmers have also reported much-improved harvests since rat numbers were drastically reduced.

Giant tortoises are “keystone species”

Their grazing maintains open habitats, promoting the growth of native plants and creating conditions that benefit reptiles, invertebrates, and birds. They also distribute native seeds across the island as they roam.

“Habitats are the foundation for biodiversity, the home that allows species to move, live and evolve naturally over time,” said Rakan Zahawi, the executive director of the Charles Darwin Foundation.

“Giant tortoises are a critical part of this system. By dispersing seeds, shaping vegetation, creating micro-habitats such as their well-known wallows, and influencing how landscapes regenerate, they help rebuild ecological processes that many other species depend on.”

Hugo Mogollón, the chief executive of Galápagos Conservancy, said, “By identifying tortoises on Wolf Volcano with Floreana ancestry and breeding their descendants, we are returning this species to its island in a form that closely reflects the original lineage—laying a critical scientific foundation for the restoration of Floreana’s ecosystems and the future reintroduction of additional native species.”

The next phase of restoration will seek to return species including the Floreana mockingbird, the Floreana racer snake, the vegetarian finch, and the little vermilion flycatcher.

Dr. Jen Jones, the chief executive of the Galapagos Conservation Trust, said, “It’s a validation of the incredible efforts we’ve seen over the last 20 years from a whole ecosystem of conservation NGOs, local authorities, determined individual researchers, and community champions.”



Original Content