When the coronavirus pandemic reached
South America human
activity on the Galapagos Islands, in the Pacific west of Ecuador, ground
almost to a halt, leaving giant tortoises, iguanas and other endemic species to
themselves.
اضافة اعلان
A four-month lockdown starting in February 2020 after
COVID-19 was first detected in the region resulted in a total halt of tourism
and near complete shutdown of scientific research.
“The impact of
COVID was very tough ... the shutdown was
immediate, from one day to the next,” complained Juan Carlos Moncayo, 50, who
runs a scuba diving center and had to make his six employees redundant.
“We had no time to prepare ourselves.”
Since July, the archipelago of 234 islands has partially
reopened to tourism — but that has been limited to just 6,000 visitors a month,
compared to an average 23,000 before the pandemic.
Moncayo’s business hasn’t recovered. Sometimes his boat sets
out to sea with just two customers — each paying a minimum $160 — when he needs
five to make a profit.
Other scuba diving businesses didn’t have enough funds to
renew their licenses.
“Out of 12, there are just six left in business,” said
Moncayo.
Even though tourists must present a negative COVID test to
come to the islands, “everything has changed because we go out to work, but
with a bit of fear.”
Many businesses have kept their shutters down. Hotels and
restaurants are deserted.
The tourism sector lost out on $850 million from March 2020
to March 2021, the local tourism chamber estimates.
Some 85 percent of the local economy is dependent on
tourism.
With the pandemic, airport closures and travel restrictions
tourism dropped by 75 percent compared to the 271,000 visitors in 2019, said
Monica Paez, a tourism ministry representative.
One lesson she’s learnt is the need for tourism that is
“based more on durability ... as a natural heritage site for humanity, that’s a
responsibility we have to the whole world.”
‘Disneyland for biologists’
Scientists, too, found themselves twiddling their thumbs,
particularly during the lockdown.
“I’ve never spent so much time without seeing the ocean
since I was in my mother’s womb,” joked Pelayo Salinas, a biologist in Santa
Cruz — one of the four inhabited islands — and director of the shark project at
the Charles Darwin Foundation.
Only 30,000 people live on these volcanic islands located
around 1,000km west of Ecuador.
The archipelago is home to more than 2,900 species, a
quarter of which are found nowhere else.
“For a biologist, the Galapagos Islands are Disneyland,”
added Salinas.
But the pandemic “changed our projects, we couldn’t go on
the ground” any more, the 37-year-old Spanish researcher told AFP.
British naturalist Charles Darwin developed his theory of
evolution following a long trip that took in the archipelago of 21 volcanoes,
including 13 active ones, the tallest of which is the Wolf at 1,707m.
While Salinas’s position meant he was allowed to stay, many
foreign researchers and interns were repatriated and more than 100 projects
ground to a halt.
There was “a direct impact on the scientific program: 60
percent of research activities planned for 2020 were suspended,” said Danny
Rueda, the director of the Galapagos National Park (PNG), responsible for 97
percent of the Galapagos land area and a vast marine reserve of almost 800,000
hectares.
Thanks to its 300 forest rangers, the PNG has been able to
maintain its “investigative activity ... supervising sharks, marine tortoises’
nesting sites, conservation ... of iguanas, sea lions, etc,” said Rueda.
But “movement from one island to another was not allowed.”
Park boats have instead been used to transfer COVID-19
patients or move testing equipment.
‘Time to breathe’
The archipelago has recorded 1,384 cases and 16 deaths from
COVID-19, compared to the 375,000 infections and 18,400 fatalities in all of
Ecuador, population 17 million.
The government plans to vaccinate all adults on the islands
by the end of May, making it “the first archipelago in Latin America” free of
COVID-19.
One unexpected benefit of the lockdown was that scientists
have had time to compile and publish their research.
“It’s given us a chance to breathe, to organize and analyze
the data we’ve compiled,” said Paola Lahuatte, 30, another biologist from the
Charles Darwin Foundation, who is studying an invasive species of fly
threatening 18 bird species.