Tourism bounces back in Ecuador's Galapagos Islands - Quito News
by IANS | Updated Jan 11, 2023

The Galapagos National Park (GNP), which manages the islands, posted the figure on its Twitter account, saying that the number shows the arrival of tourists in the archipelago is 1 per cent away from reaching the figures recorded in 2019, the last pre-pandemic year, reports Xinhua news agency.
In 2019, the islands located in the Pacific Ocean received 271,000 visitors, but that figure plunged to 73,000 at the onset of the pandemic in 2020.
In 2021, 136,000 tourists visited the islands, a figure that almost doubled in 2022, with 54 per cent being foreigners (145,445) and 46 per cent, nationals (122,243), according to the GNP.
Located about 1,000 km from continental Ecuador, the Galapagos Islands were declared a Unesco World Heritage Site in 1978.
The Galapagos archipelago composed of 127 islands, islets and rocks, of which 19 are large and 4 are inhabited, is known as the unique 'living museum and showcase of evolution'.
The Islands' unusual plant and animal life, such as marine iguanas, flightless cormorants, giant tortoises, huge cacti, endemic trees and the many different subspecies of mockingbirds and finches, inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection following his visit in 1835.
Related Articles
- Death toll in suicide bombing in Pakistan mosque reaches 72
- Covid-19 still int'l health emergency: WHO
- Palestinian killed by Israeli soldiers in southern West Bank: Medics
- Iran summons Ukraine's envoy over presidential aide's tweet about Isfahan drone attack
- Israeli citizen arrested after crossing into Lebanon
- Egyptian Prez, US state secretary discuss Israeli-Palestinian tensions
- 331 migrants rescued off Libyan coast in past week: IOM
- Croatian Prez criticises NATO chief's visit to S. Korea, Japan
- Turkey may evaluate NATO applications of Finland, Sweden separately: FM
- Hungary reports strong tourism rebound in 2022