Obstacles to Giant Tortoise Migration in the Galápagos: Invasive Trees Threaten the Journey

Obstacles to Giant Tortoise Migration in the Galápagos: Invasive Trees Threaten the Journey




Imagine⁢ a giant tortoise making its way through ⁢dense woods, defended by barbed wire-like blackberry bushes. Wildlife biologist Stephen Blake ‌and his team have been⁣ studying the movements​ of Western Santa Cruz tortoises since 2009.‌ They discovered that these ⁤tortoises embark on weeks-long migrations ⁤to the highlands of Santa Cruz Island, as much as 400 meters above sea level over‍ two‍ to four weeks, and back. ⁤These traveling tortoises tend to be large and potentially vulnerable to food shortages. They follow the green, just like⁢ Serengeti wildebeest or Canadian elk. Blake noticed that ‍the reptile’s migration corridors appeared⁢ to line up with gaps in the highly invasive Spanish cedars that were visible ⁣in satellite images on​ Google Earth. The next logical question: Were the forests a problem for the critically-endangered tortoises?

2024-03-01 07:00:00
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