Study reveals history and oceanic voyages of remarkable baobab tree
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[May 16, 2024]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - The baobab tree is a distinctive sight on the landscape.
When its contorted branches are leafless during the dry season, they
resemble jumbled roots emanating from a thick trunk, making it appear as
if someone had yanked the tree from the ground, flipped it on its head
and jammed it back into the earth.
Hence one of its nicknames: the "upside down tree." But the origins and
history of the baobab - found in Madagascar and parts of Africa and
Australia - have been something of a mystery. A new study resolves this,
based on genomic analyses of all eight recognized species as well as
ecological and geological data, so the baobab's story can finally be
told.
The baobab lineage originated in Madagascar roughly 21 million years ago
and reached Africa and Australia sometime in the past 12 million years,
the researchers found. Madagascar, an island off Africa's southeastern
coast, is a biodiversity hot spot and home to an assemblage of unusual
flora and fauna.
Two baobab lineages went extinct in Madagascar, but not before
establishing themselves elsewhere, one in Africa and one in Australia,
the study showed.
The tale of how a tree crossed the Indian Ocean to put down roots in two
distant destinations is dramatic. It appears that baobab seed pods
floated from Madagascar to mainland Africa, located about 250 miles (400
km) to the west, and to Australia, situated more than 4,000 miles
(nearly 7,000 km) to the east.
"The plants almost certainly got to Africa and Australia floating on or
with vegetation rafts," said botanist Tao Wan of the Wuhan Botanical
Garden in China, one of the authors of the study published on Wednesday
in the journal Nature.
"The long-distance dispersal to Australia was probably facilitated by
the Indian Ocean gyre, which is an oceanic current that circulates south
past Madagascar, where it probably picked up baobab seed pods, before
the current swings east to Australia, where it delivered the pods. The
current then circulates north and then swings west past Mauritius and to
Africa once again, where it completes the gyre," Wan added.
Baobabs, found in dry savannah habitats, provide food, shelter and
nesting sites for wildlife, from bees to birds to various mammals. Their
fruits also provide valuable nutrients and medicines for people, and
baobab leaves are edible, too.
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The sun rises behind baobab trees at baobab alley near the city of
Morondava, Madagascar, August 30, 2019. REUTERS/Baz Ratner/File
Photo
The trees produce large, night-flowering, sweet-smelling flowers
whose sugary nectar attracts nocturnal pollinators including fruit
bats and hawk moths, as well as two types of primates, lemurs in
Madagascar and bush babies in Africa.
"They can reach huge dimensions - depending on the species - in both
height and diameter, and are reported to live for thousands of
years. The root systems are also massive, which are considered to
play an important ecological role, helping to slow down soil erosion
and enabling nutrient recycling," said plant geneticist and study
co-author Ilia Leitch of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew in London.
"The trees have astonishing and distinctive growth forms, some
species with massive trunks that are hollow cylinders of low-quality
wood ramified with many water-filled living cells. Some of the
largest and oldest trees in Australia have been estimated to hold
more than 100,000 liters (26,400 gallons) of water," said botanist
and study co-author Andrew Leitch of Queen Mary University of
London.
They represent a water source for local people during the dry
season. But Africa's baobabs are vulnerable to elephant damage
because the animals sometimes gouge the tree trunks with their tusks
to get water.
The tree has become part of folklore.
"The people of Kafue in Africa have a legend that four beautiful
maidens used a tree for shade and the tree fell in love with them,"
Wan said. "But the maidens fell in love with humans, so the tree got
jealous and imprisoned them in its trunk, where they remain to this
day. People say you can hear them still, I guess because the hollow
center acts as some sort of sound chamber in some trees."
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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