The Galapagos Islands

Gap-fill exercise

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Complete the passage below using the following words

West         information         honey pot sites         World Heritage site         Ecuadorian         9,000 20,000         low         25         1,000km         environmentally friendly         10 to 16

The Galapagos Islands are a small chain of islands found from the coast of South America. They are , and are home to an incredible array of animals and plants. The Galapagos Islands are most famous because many of the plants and animals found there are not found anywhere else in the world. This is because the islands are isolated or cut off from the rest of the World’s land mass by the Pacific Ocean, allowing the plants and animals to EVOLVE in their own way for hundreds of thousands of years. This was noted by Charles Darwin, and spurred him on to form his famous theory of evolution. Approximately 90% of the Islands are designated as National parks and there are only permanent human residents (although this has risen from only 20 years ago), allowing for a high degree of protection of the environment. The area became the first UNESCO in 1979 and they are also a biosphere reserve.
 
The Galapagos Islands represent a place in the world were ECOTOURISM takes place. This is tourism where the people involved seek to protect the environment as much as possible and to allow for some level of education as well. In many cases of ecotourism, some of the profits go back into protecting the environment and the tourism is small scale, with visitor number densities and environmental approaches to accommodation and food. The Galapagos are run along these lines because;
Tourists visit under strict rules
They can only visit on small ships of tourists, most of which are owned by local people
The tourists can only visit a limited number of places on the Islands, thus protecting the rest of the Islands
The tourists are only allowed to visit in small numbers.
Visitors also receive on how to conserve the Islands prior to their departure to the Islands.
They also have to pay a £ fee to promote conservation on the Islands
 
 Despite all of this, there are still some problems from the overuse of some sites (), oil spills from boats, and pollution to the Islands water supply and the water supply is put under pressure from the tourists use.
 
However, local people make a valuable living from tourism and there are few other employment opportunities available. Tourists also generate a lot of businesses in the local economy as guides, restraints, hotels, boats owners and cleaners all benefit