For almost 200 years, the Galapagos rail had been missing from Floreana. Thought to be extinct on this small, inhabited island in the Galapagos archipelago, the shy, near-flightless bird is still found on some of the other islands. But Charles Darwin was the last person to record a sighting of one on Floreana, when he famously visited the island in 1835.
This year, after the removal of rats and feral cats from Floreana, the bird stunned conservationists by making a surprise re-appearance on the island. How the lost bird returned is a mystery. Other threatened birds have also recovered, and some are even singing new tunes never heard on the island before, which you can listen to below. The change reveals new insights into how a safer, almost predator-free environment can allow animals to experiment and innovate, scientists say.
“The Galapagos rail was one that I was not expecting at all,” agrees Paula Castaño, a wildlife veterinarian who works for Island Conservation, one of the organisations restoring Floreana. “It just showed up” on Floreana, she says, adding that perhaps it had clung on as a small, hidden, unnoticed population all this time.


