Unique species in ‘the world’s most biodiverse desert’ are at risk from a warming planet and the lucrative plant poaching trade

In May 2020, 10mm of rain fell at Sendelingsdrif Rest Camp in South Africa’s most north-westerly corner. After enduring nine years of almost zero rain, Pieter van Wyk, a 32-year-old self-taught botanist who heads up the Richtersveld national park’s nursery, was elated to see several species flower for the first time in almost a decade. The rain, including 200mm on the nearby mountains, was a welcome respite for the world heritage site’s flora and fauna.

His joy, however, was short-lived. While the rain gave a temporary lease of life to some annuals and bulbs in the |Ai-|Ais/Richtersveld transfrontier park, it did little to alter the fact that scores of species, especially large succulent plants such as aloes, are in peril. A study to be published by Van Wyk and others shows that 85% of the population of the distinctive Pearson’s aloe (Aloe pearsonii) – endemic to the Richtersveld – has been lost in the past five years, having been a stable presence for the previous four decades.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘It’s over’: World Cup kiss becomes Spanish football’s #MeToo moment

Jenni Hermoso receives ovation at Madrid match as hashtag #SeAcabo is embraced…

Godland review – beauty and terror in magnificent study of church-building priest

Hlynur Pálmason’s fictional account of a Danish pastor sent to Iceland in…

Trudeau bets on strength of his Covid response in gamble to stay in power

Canadian PM hopes his handling of the crisis can override uproar over…