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The Galápagos is a wildlife haven. But is that enough to protect the rare scalloped hammerhead shark?
environment

The Galápagos is a wildlife haven. But is that enough to protect the rare scalloped hammerhead shark?

The Guardian Environment · Jun 9, 2026, 11:00 AM · Also reported by 2 other sources

Why this matters: environmental and climate reporting with long-term consequences.

The species is abundant within the protected archipelago but when they migrate outside the marine reserve to give birth they run the gauntlet of industrial fishing. The unmistakable fluted T-shape of a scalloped hammerhead shark slides by, followed by a diver holding his breath and a metal spear like an extra-long snooker cue. The spear hits the fish behind its dorsal fin and the 2-metre shark darts away, disgruntled but otherwise unharmed.Carlos Robalino, a marine biologist from the Galápagos Islands, trained as a shark researcher in Mexico but is now back home and working as a junior researcher at the Charles Darwin Foundation. When we meet in March, he is one of the divers on the foundation’s research expedition to Darwin and Wolf, the most northerly islands in the Galápagos marine reserve. Continue reading...

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