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  • Although he didn't realise it at the time,

  • the most important specimens Charles Darwin brought back

  • from the Galapagos were finches.

  • Initially he wasn't sure how they were related

  • but when back in England,

  • they were examined by the ornithologist John Gould

  • he reported that in fact Darwin had brought back

  • 13 different species of finch,

  • all of which were unique to the Galapagos.

  • This realisation played a significant role

  • in Darwin's formulation of his theory of evolution.

  • The most important differences between the finches

  • came in their beaks.

  • Some were large, some were small.

  • Each one was suited

  • to the availability of particular foodstuffs.

  • Eventually Darwin theorised that different species of finch

  • had evolved on different islands,

  • their distinctive beaks being an adaptation

  • to distinct natural habitats or environmental niches.

  • In the years since Darwin's visit,

  • many other scientists and ornithologists

  • have come to the Galapagos to study its finches.

  • In this experiment researchers are observing the woodpecker finch,

  • using this wooden box to stand in for a tree.

  • The woodpecker finch

  • is one of the only birds to use tools to help it find food.

  • A stick or small twig enables it to dig deeper into tree bark

  • for insect larvae.

  • This skill enables it to survive

  • in conditions which other birds would find difficult.

  • In the dry season it can gather up to 50% of its food in this way.

  • Woodpecker finches are hungry birds

  • which in the wild need to eat every three hours,

  • so they never turn down the chance of a free meal.

Although he didn't realise it at the time,

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