There is no commercial fishing in Antarctica: it is prohibited by the Antarctic Treaty.
Tourism, fishing, agriculture, and harvesting.
Tourism is the largest industry in the Galapagos islands. Fishing also plays a large part in the local economy and sustainability.
There is no commercial fishing or mining allowed on the Antarctic continent, prohibited by the Antarctic Treaty.
You can do several things in teh Galapagos Islands. You could do some snorkeling, fishing, kayaking, and scuba diving. Please check out: http://www.govisitgalapagos.com/activities/default.asp
the Galapagos islands have suffered envrionmental issuses, it has been polluted, over fishing, the tourism is causing all of this. if you go to the following site that should help quite a bit: http://www.galapagosislands.com/html/environment.html hope it helps good luck
i believe it is Venezuela. a couple of years ago, pre-chavez, i read an article in the economist. a group of fishermen got together to protest fishing restrictions around the galapagos islands. they threatened to release rats, goats, dogs, cats, and pigs onto the islands unless the restrictions were loosened. the country of Venezuela responded.
The biggest employment sector for inhabitants in Galapagos is in the tourist sector (hotels, restaurants, tour boats, scuba diving outfits, guides etc). Outside of tourist- related work, the next main occupation is fishing.
Commercial Fishing makes fishing a lot safer than Aquaculture. Commercial Fishing also offers more jobs and the nets are made to not hurt the animals in the way/
That means you are not allowed to fish there.
Sport fishing does very little if any damage to the ecosystem. Unregulated commercial fishing can deplete fish stocks.
This is an example of adaptive radiation, where a single ancestor species diversifies into multiple specialized forms to occupy different ecological niches. The different beak shapes in finches allowed them to exploit various food sources on the Galapagos Islands, illustrating natural selection in action.