Other examples in the central Oriente, which is more accessible by road and the easily navigable Napo River, also focus on providing income to traditional populations in outlying areas. The Napo wildlife Center provides 49% of its profits to the local Quichua community and 85% of its employees are from the local village. There is a strong focus on providing an underpinning of economic support for the local rural people in many projects of this kind throughout Ecuador – and it is this type of thinking that has made Ecuador one of the most dynamic examples of how ecotourism can become a nationally significant activity that supports conservation.