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Project Floreana: Community-based, Island-wide Conservation

Summary of Project Floreana

Project Floreana is a 5-year program to restore the Island of Floreana, Galapagos, to a balanced ecosystem using a combination of community based conservation and adaptive management techniques. The Charles Darwin Foundation (CDF) and the Galapagos National Park Service aim to stimulate a collective vision for Floreana’s future and provide employment, training, and education for the community. Water, waste, and energy issues that affect the community will be addressed, and priority conservation areas will be determined and effective management methods developed for these areas based on field surveys and remote sensing methods. Prevention and management of invasive species will be carried out through community action, and the control of rats and cats will allow for the reintroduction of locally extinct species.

Download a 4-page PROJECT FLOREANA PROPOSAL PDF.

View of Post Office Bay and the world famous Mail Barrel

This project will link the entire population to the protection and restoration of their island and provide an important model for restoration of other inhabited islands. Donors across the US and worldwide will provide the funding for a long-term successful restoration of Floreana Island and a sustainable future for island residents.

Why Floreana? A bit of background. . .

Galapagos was placed on the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Danger due to the direct and indirect effects of people. 97% of the archipelago is protected as an uninhabited National Park, but increasing population pressure in the agricultural and urban zones of the four inhabited islands and the concomitant increased impact of invasive species are leading to significant degradation of the unique natural ecosystems. The effect of introduced species has long been recognized as one of the worst threats to oceanic archipelagos worldwide, but it is only recently that people have realized that Galapagos is no longer an untouched paradise but is also threatened.

Invasive Blackberry removal (GNP Photo)The Galapagos National Park Service and Charles Darwin Foundation have worked intensively to remove some of the key introduced species from uninhabited islands and as a result these islands are in a much better condition than they were 50 years ago. However, the inhabited islands continue to degrade. In addition, there is a low environmental awareness in the community of the need for conservation action, and strong pressure for the increasing development of the islands.

Floreana is the smallest of the four inhabited islands in Galapagos. It was the first island in the archipelago to be inhabited and shows significant habitat degradation and the highest level of species loss of any island in Galapagos. There have been two global extinctions — the Floreana giant tortoise Geochelone elephantopus and a cucumber vine Sicyos villosus — and eight other species unique to Galapagos are no longer found on Floreana. These include the Floreana mockingbird and Galapagos racer that are now restricted to two of the islets surrounding Floreana — Champion and Gardener. The loss of the Floreana tortoise is of particular concern as tortoises are ecosystem engineers, playing a key part in the formation and maintenance of the environment of Galapagos. The island has been heavily impacted by introduced species which have destroyed some of the unique habitats once present on the island so that the remaining biota remain critically threatened.

Invasive species management is not straightforward and requires a long-term commitment, resources, and an adaptive management approach. It uses a suite of techniques ranging from prevention (through quarantine), to control, eradication, and restoration. On an inhabited island this work cannot be undertaken without the collaboration of the community. This kind of collaboration has not been achieved in Galapagos yet; to date, invasive species management has used rules and regulations rather than building understanding and commitment in the community to ensure appropriate and sustainable action.

GNP Guide Richard Polatty Welcomes his tour group to FloreanaToday Floreana has a small human population of 120 people, most of whom are subsistence farmers; unlike other islands, the population has not seen a huge increase in immigration. This is mainly due to limited resources such as water, power, and waste disposal/treatment, as well as the difficulty of access and a lack of jobs. In addition, natural resource management on Floreana is not advanced, and new and better practices need to be established. Finding sustainable solutions to these issues affects people’s livelihoods, making this project highly relevant to the community.

Because of its small size and small population, Floreana Island offers a unique opportunity to develop an integrated approach to restoration, by engaging the community in looking for practical solutions to many of the problems affecting the island. The project will use local, national, and international technical expertise to help in the development of efficient and effective strategies for the long-term sustainability of restoration programs and livelihoods. This will not only protect and increase the conservation value of the island, but will link the entire population of the island with action to help prevent further degradation. Key aspects of the islands biodiversity and ecosystem function will be restored, and lessons learned from Project Floreana will provide a useful model for other inhabited islands.

It is hoped that Floreana can be restored to a state more similar to that which Charles Darwin would have observed on his voyage to Galapagos in 1835.

Main Goals of Project Floreana in 2009 and 2010:

  • Goal 1: Working with the community: Understand and address social issues and aspirations of the community; develop a participative plan for the long term economic, environmental, and social sustainability of Floreana Island.
  • Goal 2: To increase the efficiency and effectiveness of conservation management in Floreana.
  • Goal 3: To decrease the risk of further invasive species problems in Floreana.
  • Goal 4: To mitigate or eliminate the main threats to native wildlife allowing for establishment of self sustaining populations of locally extinct species.

Project Floreana Leaders

Dr. Rachel Atkinson has nine years of experience in the management and coordination of restoration projects on islands, from individual species management to whole island restoration projects. She has trained field teams in weed control, coordinated research programs on invasive species and critically endangered species, and has led community awareness projects. Dr. Atkinson leads CDF’s Ecological Restoration science theme.

Dr. Mark Gardener has 15 years’ experience in the areas of invasive species management, fire, and restoration ecology. Before joining CDF’s executive team in 2008, he worked in the mining industry in remote, tropical Australia facilitating natural resource management and mine-site restoration, working with key stakeholders: traditional owners, national park, Australian Government, and mining company. He is CDF’s Director of Terrestrial Sciences.

Mr. Jose Luis Mendoza is the Project Coordinator for the project. He comes from Manta in Ecuador and will join the CDF team in September 2009. He has 5 years of experience working with communities in Ecuador using the participatory approach to help in joint management of their coastal resources.

If you are interested in providing substantial funding and would like to see a detailed proposal and budget for Project Floreana, please email member@galapagos.org

Download a 4-page PROJECT FLOREANA PROPOSAL PDF.

Comment

  1. Have you asked those who get people to pay thousands of dollars to visist the galapagos to donate $ from each person who books with them? They are the ones who after all are profiting from the galapagos and surely they are they ones to best give?

    — deborah brown · Saturday November 14, 2009 · #

  2. Deborah,
    In fact, we do partner with several tour operators in Galapagos, and they do exactly what you describe. . .some suggest or collect donations before their tourists arrive in Galapagos, and others do so while tourists are on board. GC is working to develop similar programs with more of these tour operators and hotel owners.
    —GC Staff

    — GC Staff · Wednesday December 09, 2009 · #

  3. If a population of 120 people can impact negatively this small island, then we might as well take all them out. The same can be said about the other three islands. I know, it sounds extreme and unfair to the islanders but if we want the Galapagos to be as pristine as when Charles Darwin visited them, then there is no other choice. President Correa could apply his plan to save the amazon basin in the Galapagos. Have the world pay Ecuador to revert the islands to it’s natural state and keep them like that for centuries to come.

    — Patricio Castro · Monday March 08, 2010 · #

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