Colombian botanist risking life for nature
FOR the last three decades, botanist Julio Betancur has braved minefields and penetrated deep into jungle territory infested with drug traffickers and armed gangs in a bid to document Colombia’s rich biodiversity.
Colombia is second only to Brazil for its incredible range of fauna and flora. Armed only with a notebook and gardening shears, Betancur has taken considerable risks to collect plant cuttings.
He’s contributed four percent of the 600,000 samples in the University of Colombia’s herbarium.
There have been close calls including “a slightly violent” encounter with a group of drug runners Betancur and his colleagues came across in the jungle.
“Without realizing it, we were putting ourselves in the eye of the storm,” Betancur told AFP.
Fortunately, the drug traffickers accepted their explanations and left them alone.
On another occasion, local peasants freed them from a minefield.
“If it hadn’t been for them, the communities, we wouldn’t be here telling the story,” said Betancur.
The 59-year-old, a biologist, university professor and collector of bromeliads -- which include the pineapple, Spanish moss and queen of the Andes -- says it’s worth taking the risks so his country can “know about” its biodiversity.
While dangers lurk for Betancur, Colombia’s biodiversity faces far more threats.
Deforestation -- mainly from livestock farming but also illegal mining and coca plantations -- has done untold damage to Colombia’s jungles.