Nobody Knows. The Galapagos Islands are a tricky biome. Like any island, the Galapagod Islands do not have any specific biome. The closest any scientist and gotten to the specific biome is Tropical Rainforest.
Galapagos Tortoises are to be found on the Galapagos Islands there are different types of tortoise to be found on each island.
The galapagos tortoise live in the galapagos island
they live in the lowlands of the galapagos islands
Larger islands with humid highlands over 800 m (2,600 ft) in elevation, such as Santa Cruz, which have abundant vegetation near the ground.
in my house next to the desert
Galapagos island
The Galapagos finches and the Galapagos tortoises.
Galapagos Hawk
Galapagos Tortoises are reptiles.
Galapagos tortoises eat grass and other plants which they acquire from grassy meadows.
their shells
The Galapagos Islands got their name from the Giant Tortoises that live there. These tortoises were baptized by the Spaniards in the 16th century as Galapago.
They live in the Galapagos Islands which are a part of Ecuador.
about 15,000
tortoises
the biome lives in the tolit
The galapagos tortoise live in the galapagos island
Yes! They are called "Galapagos tortoises," by the way. They live in the Galapagos Islands, which are 13 main islands and many smaller islands, all of which are off the coast of Equador in South America. Galapagos tortoises are huge, the biggest tortoises alive today, getting to be up to 660 lbs (300 kg)! They eat about 70 lbs. of food, and sometimes a lot more. There are 12 different species of Galapagos tortoises, but two of them are extinct. The remaining Galapagos tortoises are labeled as "threatend" and "vulnerable." A lot of people mistakenly call tortoises "turtles." A turtle is water-dwelling (either sea or fesh water), omnivorous and flat shelled, while tortoises are land-dwelling, vegetarian, and have dome-shaped shells. Also, tortoises are really, really slow (average speed for a Galapagos tortoise is .18 mph!) and turtles are actually surprisingly fast.