The Herald (South Africa)

Climate change could be killing baobabs

- Dave Chambers

BAOBABS are dying across Southern Africa‚ and climate change may be to blame.

Some of the oldest and largest baobab trees in South Africa‚ Zimbabwe‚ Namibia‚ Botswana and Zambia had died in the past decade‚ a team of internatio­nal researcher­s said.

“Nine of the 13 oldest individual­s have died‚ or at least their oldest parts/stems have collapsed and died‚ over the past 12 years‚” they wrote in the scientific journal Nature Plants‚ calling it an event of an unpreceden­ted magnitude.

The trees‚ between 1 100 and 2 500 years in age‚ may have fallen victim to climate change‚ a team which included Stephan Woodborne, of iThemba Labs in Johannesbu­rg, and Grant Hall, of the University of Pretoria, said.

Study leader Adrian Patrut‚ of Babes-Bolyai University in Romania‚ said: “It is definitely shocking and dramatic to experience during our lifetime the demise of so many trees with millennial ages.”

While the cause of the deaths is unknown‚ the researcher­s “suspect that the demise of monumental baobabs may be associated at least in part with significan­t modificati­ons of climate conditions that affect Southern Africa in particular”.

Patrut said the dead trunks were only 40% water‚ instead of the 75% to 80% they should have been.

“Their condition meant they could no longer support the tree’s weight.”

Between 2005 and 2017‚ the researcher­s dated “practicall­y all known very large and potentiall­y old” African baobabs – more than 60 in total.

After studying data on girth‚ height‚ wood volume and age‚ they noted the unexpected and intriguing fact that most of the oldest and biggest trees had died during the study period.

The researcher­s used radiocarbo­n dating to analyse samples from the trees and found that the baobab trunk grows from up to seven core stems.

Four of the trees they studied died completely‚ meaning all their stems toppled together.

The oldest tree which suffered the collapse of all its stems was the Panke tree in Zimbabwe‚ estimated to have existed for 2 500 years.

The biggest‚ Holboom‚ was from Namibia. It stood 30.2m tall and had a girth of 35.1m.

The most famous victim of the dieoff was the Chapman’s baobab‚ a national monument and tourist attraction in central Botswana that bore the carved initials of explorer David Livingston­e.

It was named after South African hunter James Chapman‚ who visited it in 1852. On January 7 2016‚ its six trunks all collapsed and died.

“These deaths were not caused by an epidemic and there has also been a rapid increase in the apparently natural deaths of many other mature baobabs‚” the researcher­s said.

“We suspect that the demise of monumental baobabs may be associated at least in part with significan­t modificati­ons of climate conditions that affect Southern Africa in particular. However‚ further research is necessary to support or refute this.”

ý The baobab is the biggest and longest-living flowering tree.

It serves as a massive store of water and bears fruit that feeds animals and humans.

It is sometimes known as the “dead rat” tree‚ after the shape of its fruit. – TimesLIVE

 ?? Picture: MARIANNE SCHWANKHAR­T ?? DOOMED ANCIENTS: Baobabs in Botswana
Picture: MARIANNE SCHWANKHAR­T DOOMED ANCIENTS: Baobabs in Botswana

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