Tag Archives: Isla Floreana

Geospiza magnirostris ssp. magnirostris Gould

Large Ground Finch (Geospiza magnirostris ssp. magnirostris)

The Large Ground Finch was described in 1837 based on material that was collected by Charles Darwin on the Galápagos Islands.

The species reaches a size of about 16 cm; the males are mostly blackish brown while the females are speckled dark – and light brown.

Today this species can be found on all the main islands within the archipelago, except for Darwin, Española, and San Cristóbal, where it is thought to have become extinct. 

***

When Charles Darwin visited the Galápagos Islands in 1835, he collected several specimens on several of the islands; his specimens, however, don’t always bear reliable labels, and in some cases, he seems to have forgotten on which island he had collected which specimen.

Indeed, Darwin’s typespecimens have provided a considerable nightmare of taxonomic problems for subsequent ornithologists, based largely on their controversial localities. Darwin claimed, for example, that specimens of a peculiar large-beaked form of Geospiza magnirostris came from Chatham [Isla Floreana] and Charles islands [Isla San Cristóbal]. But after more than a century of subsequent collecting without finding any such large-billed specimens, ornithologists found themselves faced with a puzzle. Either this form had become extinct on Chatham and Charles islands, where no magnirostris specimens (large or small) had ever been found by other expeditions; or else Darwin’s specimens must have come from islands other than those indicated.” [1]

***

This very large-billed Large Ground Finch is often treated as some kind of nominate form of the species but may in fact be nothing but a just large-billed population that is now gone for whatever reasons.

*********************  

References:  

[1] Frank J. Sulloway: The Beagle collections of Darwin’s finches (Geospizinae).- Bulletin of the British Museum of Natural History (Zoology) 43: 49-94. 1982

*********************

Depiction from: ‘John Gould: The Zoology of the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle, under the command of Captain Fitzroy, during the years 1832-1836. Part III, Birds. London, Smith, Elder & Co. 1838’  

(public domain)

*********************

edited: 31.05.2021

Sicyos villosus Hook. f.

Galapagos Bur Cucumber (Sicyos villosus)  

This species is only known from the type material, which was collected in the year 1853 by Charles Darwin on the island of Floreana. He wrote the following note on his herbaria sheet.:  

… in great beds injurious to vegetation ….”  

Therefore, the Galapagos Bur Cucumber obviously was quite common at that time.  

The reason for the complete extinction of this species lies, in all likelihood, in the feral goats, which until very recently could spread unfettered all over every place, on almost every single island in the Galápagos Archipelago.  

***

In the year 2006, a program for the eradication of feral goats (and donkeys) was started on the island of Floreana – the same program had proved very successful over several years on other islands of the archipelago. During this campaign the number of goats shot in the year 2008 alone was 1334.  

Unfortunately, goats are still illegally released on the Islands.  

*********************  

References:  

[1] Ira Loren Wiggins; Duncan M. Porter; Edward F. Anderson: Flora of the Galápagos Islands. Stanford University Press 1971 
[2] Alison Pearn: A Voyage Round the World: Charles Darwin and the Beagle Collections in the University of Cambridge. Cambridge University Press 2011

*********************  

edited: 11.06.2020