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  • When Darwin visited the Galápagos,

  • almost every island was crowded with wildlife.

  • Most large islands have their own species of tortoise,

  • which could be identified by the distinctive shape of its shell.

  • Today, some of these species are extinct

  • and on some islands the tortoises are limited to nature reserves.

  • The problem is people.

  • Settlers to the islands have brought in farm animals

  • and other non-native species,

  • which have had a devastating effect on native habitats.

  • The tortoises which gave the Galápagos Islands their name

  • have found themselves sharing their food with wild goats -

  • the descendents of animals brought into the Galápagos

  • by Ecuadorian fishermen and British pirates.

  • The tortoises don't have the same reach as the goats.

  • They're happy with handouts in the tortoise sanctuary

  • but find it harder to compete in the wild.

  • On the island of Isabela, for example,

  • at one stage, the goat population reached a staggering 50,000

  • and the National Park authorities

  • had to begin an eradication programme.

  • An eradication programme means just get out and shoot these goats.

  • By foot or by helicopter. Who knows? But we have to kill them

  • so the vegetation can have a chance to recover.

  • By 2002, Isabela was cleared of its goat problem.

  • and scientists were cautiously optimistic

  • that the tortoises might be able to reclaim their territory.

When Darwin visited the Galápagos,

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