The Signal

Africa’s iconic baobob trees suddenly dying

- Doyle Rice USA TODAY

Baobab trees – an icon of Africa and the heart of many traditiona­l African remedies and folklore – are dying across the continent, and scientists are trying to understand why.

A study published Monday found eight of the 13 oldest trees in Africa have died over the past decade, and the authors suggest climate change might affect the ability of the baobab to survive.

“The deaths of the majority of the oldest and largest African baobabs over the past 12 years is an event of an unpreceden­ted magnitude,” the authors said. “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.”

Baobabs – also known as “dead-rat” trees after the shape of their fruit – are among the most distinctiv­e plants in the world, featuring stout, massive, branchless trunks that can look like pillars.

The study’s lead author, Adrian Patrut, a chemist at Romania’s Babes-Bolyai University, told NPR that “such a disastrous decline is very unexpected. It’s a strange feeling because these are trees which may live for 2,000 years or more, and we see that they’re dying one after another during our lifetime. It’s statistica­lly very unlikely.”

Using radiocarbo­n dating, the researcher­s analyzed more than 60 of the largest and potentiall­y oldest baobab trees in Africa from 2005 to 2017. They were surprised that most of the oldest and biggest died within those 12 years.

Man-made climate change is a likely suspect, scientists said. Increased temperatur­e and drought are the primary threats, Patrut told BBC News.

The study was published in the peerreview­ed British journal Nature Plants.

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