Mindanao Times

Colombian botanist risking life for nature

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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.

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