A new view - and interview - of the natural history of the umbrella thorn (Vachellia tortilis)

@wynand_uys @botaneek @troos @zarek @warrenmcc @davidbygott @capracornelius @dejong @ptexis @christiaan_viljoen @tonyrebelo @jeremygilmore @ludwig_muller @botswanabugs @mr_fab @aguilita @daverichardson @charles_stirton @thebeachcomber @andrew_hankey @sedgesrock @richardgill @geoffnichols @graham_g @reubenheydenrych @craigpeter @ricky_taylor @bartwursten @robert_taylor @francoisdurandt

Please see https://explorebioedge.com/2023/10/18/heaven-on-a-barbed-stick-copy/.

Footnote: who noticed the map of Africa hidden in the branchwork of the tree on the cover page?

Publicado el 31 de agosto de 2024 a las 10:16 AM por milewski milewski

Comentarios

Good reading, thanks.

Anotado por wynand_uys hace cerca de 2 meses

@wynand_uys
You are most welcome.

Anotado por milewski hace cerca de 2 meses

Thanks for this very interesting article.
I understand vachellia seeds like v nilotica are very high in protein.
Perhaps plant breeding is needed to make thornless vachellia trees so we can grow beans on trees in arid places ( like Botswana) and no irrigation is needed and harvesting is easy. Are vachellia seeds underutilised by people in Africa as protein sources ?

Anotado por botswanabugs hace cerca de 2 meses

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