The Guardian (USA)

Leonardo DiCaprio leads $43m pledge to restore the Galápagos Islands

- Rhi Storer

Leonardo DiCaprio has announced a $43m (£30.4m) pledge to enact sweeping conservati­on operations across the Galápagos Islands, with his social media accounts taken over by a wildlife veterinari­an and island restoratio­n specialist.

The initiative, in partnershi­p with Re:wild, an organisati­on founded this year by a group of renowned conservati­on scientists and DiCaprio, the Galápagos National Park Directorat­e, Island Conservati­on and local communitie­s, aims to rewild the entire Galápagos Islands, as well as all of Latin America’s Pacific archipelag­os.

It has a large number of supporting and implementi­ng partners from a range of philanthro­pic and environmen­tal organisati­ons, including Galápagos National Park Directorat­e, Ecuador’s Ministry of Environmen­t and Water, and Charles Darwin Foundation.

The $43m pledge will fund Galápagos projects including efforts to restore Floreana Island, home to 54 threatened species, and reintroduc­e 13 locally extinct species, including the Floreana mockingbir­d – the first mockingbir­d described by Charles Darwin.

The money will also pay for a captive breeding programme and other activities to prevent the extinction of the pink iguana, and strengthen measures to protect the Galápagos’s marine resources from the human impact of ecotourism.

DiCaprio said: “When I travelled to the Galápagos Islands, I met with Paula Castaño and other environmen­tal heroes in Ecuador working day in and day out to save one of the most irreplacea­ble places on the planet.

“Around the world, the wild is declining. We have degraded three-quarters of the wild places and pushed more than 1 million species to the brink of extinction. More than half of Earth’s remaining wild areas could disappear in the next few decades if we don’t decisively act.

“The environmen­tal heroes that the planet needs are already here. Now we all must rise to the challenge and join them.”

Paula A Castaño, who will take over DiCaprio’s Instagram and Twitter accounts to promote critical interventi­ons needed to rewild the Galápagos, said: “Time is running out for so many species, especially on islands where their small population­s are vulnerable and threatened.

“We need catalytic investment­s like the one announced today to replicate our successes in the Galápagos and elsewhere.”

Castaño, who has been working as an island restoratio­n specialist for eight years, believes that if humans can coexist with nature, ecosystems can be rewilded successful­ly.

“Up to 97% of the land area of the Galápagos Islands comes under national park status. We are not trying to remove humans from the picture. We are trying to all work together to rewild these ecosystems, and support the community as well. They want to be able to continue to thrive together with nature.

“For example, in Floreana, you can see a Darwin finch right next to you. If you go to the beach, you can see sea lions somewhere in the corners basking in the sun right next to you. They

don’t have that fear of humans because we work together. They don’t have the threats in other locations when they are completely afraid of humans.”

Castaño recalled successful rewilding restoratio­ns in the past. In 2012, invasive rodents were removed from the island of Pinzón by the Galápagos national park, assisted by Island Conservati­on to benefit the Pinzón giant tortoise. As a result, new hatchlings were discovered in 2014.

“We have seen rewilding in our lifetime, so we don’t really have to wait five years or 20 or 50 years. These are immediate results. We will see the payoff for all of these efforts, and not across only the Galápagos, but farther beyond archipelag­os in Latin America.”

Marcelo Mata Guerrero, Ecuador’s minister of environmen­t and water, said: “These kinds of partnershi­ps that leverage technical, social and financial innovation­s, are exactly what we need around the world to restore the health of our planet.

“With Ecuador, as one of the 17 most biodiverse countries on the planet, we have an opportunit­y here to demonstrat­e what a truly effective model looks like for the protection and restoratio­n of our shared wildlife and wild lands – the immune system of our planet, protecting all life on Earth, including people, from the effects of climate change and emerging disease.”

DiCaprio, a longtime champion of global environmen­tal issues, has provided more than $100m in grants to a variety of programs and projects. He has also praised the teenage climate change activist Greta Thunberg as a “leader of our time”, and addressed the United Nations about the dangers of climate change in 2014.

 ?? Photograph: Andrew S Wright/Global Wildlife ConserA ?? A marine iguana on Floreanna Island, which is home to 54 threatened species and forms part of the Galápagos national park.
Photograph: Andrew S Wright/Global Wildlife ConserA A marine iguana on Floreanna Island, which is home to 54 threatened species and forms part of the Galápagos national park.
 ?? Photograph: Bill Weir/Global Wildlife Conservati­on ?? Floreana mockingbir­d, one of the island’s locally extinct species and the first mockingbir­d described by Charles Darwin.
Photograph: Bill Weir/Global Wildlife Conservati­on Floreana mockingbir­d, one of the island’s locally extinct species and the first mockingbir­d described by Charles Darwin.

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