The Star Late Edition

Caring for confiscate­d rare plants

- KRISTIN ENGEL kristin.engel@inl.co.za

THE World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF-SA), Cape Nature, and the SA National Biodiversi­ty Institute (Sanbi) have shone a spotlight on the rise in illegal harvesting of plants across the Succulent Karoo region.

They were on a tour inside a confidenti­al facility where thousands of decades-old confiscate­d succulents are held.

According to Sanbi, confiscate­d plants in their facilities have increased annually by more than 20% over the past four years with 650 different species and over 1.2 million wild harvested plants seized by police and law enforcemen­t up to this month.

It is suspected that less than 25% of the illegal plant trade is intercepte­d by law enforcemen­t and over 1.5 million plants have been removed from the wild in the past three years.

Carina Becker du Toit, the scientific co-ordinator for plant poaching at Sanbi, said: “We are at one of a number of Sanbi facilities that is housing confiscate­d poached plants. We are located within the Succulent Karoo because our climate is more suited to housing the plants that come from these arid areas, as opposed to other facilities in the country. The bulk of our cases are coming in from the Northern Cape but we get cases from the Western Cape as well.”

On average, this facility received anywhere between three and seven cases a week, with anywhere between 1 000 and 10 000 plants per case.

These escalating numbers are putting strain on Sanbi’s resources to be able to house the plants as they need soil, trays, watering and manpower to count the plants, photograph them, and identify them for law enforcemen­t.

Becker du Toit said: “The problem we have now is that these plants are being poached at such an alarming rate, that we are actually struggling to keep up with updating their population numbers.

“When these plants arrive, we support law enforcemen­t with giving statements and key informatio­n about plant numbers, their age, and what value they have in the ecosystem …

“We then basically triage the plants when they come in and see which ones we can save and which ones we have to let go because we just don’t have the space to house all these plants.”

Some of these plants are from the Conophytum genus, the main genus targeted through plant poaching, and some others that are in high demand in the internatio­nal horticultu­ral trade as collectors’ items – the more unusual, rare or funky looking they are, the more they are desired by internatio­nal markets.

Police and law enforcemen­t have been confiscati­ng these plants from the illegal trade on highways, on trucks and cars, at road blocks, at OR Tambo Airport (where they are seized through customs), and even through spotting people in the veld with bags and tools.

The organisati­ons appealed to the public to keep a lookout for plants that were being sold or trafficked illegally and advised that a simple way the public could assist was by verifying where the plants being sold on the side of the road or at markets were sourced from and acquired.

WWF-SA Succulent Karoo project co-ordinator Katherine Forsythe said this “dramatic and catastroph­ic increase in illegal harvesting of succulent plants” has been endangerin­g the high levels of diversity and endemism of species within the Succulent Karoo Biome, a global biodiversi­ty hot spot.

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 ?? KRISTEN ENGEL ?? PLANTS in a greenhouse specially designed for living collection­s, where Sanbi collects plants from the wild to build them into the gardens and keep a representa­tive sample of each plant that exists in the wild. |
KRISTEN ENGEL PLANTS in a greenhouse specially designed for living collection­s, where Sanbi collects plants from the wild to build them into the gardens and keep a representa­tive sample of each plant that exists in the wild. |

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