Call & Times

Chinese caves hide rare plants

- By AMANDA ERICKSON

At first glance, a cave doesn’t seem the likeliest home for exotically lush flora. It’s dark, damp and dingy, more likely to host sparkly stalagmite­s than bristly bushes.

It turns out, though, that China’s caverns play host to a stunning variety of plants, including some found nowhere else in the world. That’s according to a new paper published in PLOS ONE, a scientific journal.

Over five years, researcher­s visited more than 60 caves in the southern Guangxi, Guizhou and Yunnan regions of China. They targeted some of the country’s least-explored areas. Their goal was to catalogue every plant species they found in more detail than ever before. (As one researcher described an early visit, “That first visit transporte­d me to another world, an eerie moonscape in which plants thrived in powdery ‘soil’ and perpetual twilight.”)

By the end of their work, they had uncovered 418 types of flora and fauna in the caves, including 31 plants that exist nowhere else besides. Thirty-seven percent of the species they found do not exist outside China. “Before we started we had no idea of the diversity of plants in caves, or that so many species are known only from caves,” Alexander Monro, a biologist from the Kew Royal Botanic Gardens who led the study, wrote in a statement.

The researcher­s say most of the endemic plants were found near the entryways of the caves, what the researcher­s called “twilight zones.” That piece of evidence has generated an unusual theory: that many of the plants once lived outside the caves, too, but were wiped out by deforestat­ion.

As Atlas Obscura explained: “The researcher­s believe that they were once part of a continuum of vegetation that extended into the understory of the surroundin­g forest, or the layer of vegetation in the shaded area between the canopy and the ground.”

Large swaths of Chinese forests were erased in the 1950s through 1970s as part of the country’s rapid industrial­ization and Mao Zedong’s Great Leap Forward. That has been linked to some of China’s biggest environmen­tal challenges, including poor air quality and severe erosion.

More recently, the country has been working to address this issue. Between 2000 and 2010, China’s forest cover grew by 46,000 square miles, thanks in large part to a significan­t crackdown on illegal mining. (Unfortunat­ely, China’s commitment to preserve and grow its own forests has resulted in massive deforestat­ion elsewhere.)

Destructio­n of the world’s forests accounts for about 10 percent of global greenhouse-gas emissions, researcher­s say. As Inside Climate News explains: “Forests are potent carbon sponges, so ending the burning and razing of trees and allowing the damaged forests to recover could deliver as much as 40 percent of the emissions cuts needed to keep warming within 2 degrees Celsius.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States