Africa’s tallest tree measuring 81m found on Mount Kilimanjaro
24 November 2016
Africa’s tallest tree measuring
81m found on Mount Kilimanjaro
![Tallest tree](https://d1o50x50snmhul.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/24155741/entandrophragma_flm4_2_13-0001.jpg)
![Tallest tree](https://d1o50x50snmhul.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/24155741/entandrophragma_flm4_2_13-0001.jpg)
Reaching for the skies
Andreas Hemp
By Agata Blaszczak-Boxe
It’s
definitely a contender. Africa’s tallest indigenous tree – measuring a whopping
81.5 metres has been discovered in a remote valley on the continent’s highest
mountain, Kilimanjaro.
The
colossus in Tanzania has matched Africa’s previous tree-height record
established
by a
specimen of the introduced Sydney blue gum (Eucalyptus saligna)
in Limpopo, South Africa,
which
died in 2006.
Andreas
Hemp at the University of Bayreuth in Germany first spotted a bunch of tall
Entandrophragma
excelsum trees while exploring Mount Kilimanjaro’s vegetation 20
years ago.
But it
was not until recently that he and his team were able to measure their heights
accurately
using new
tools.
They
sized 32 specimens with laser instruments between 2012 and 2016, finding that
the
10
tallest individuals ranged from 59.2 to 81.5 metres in height and 0.98 to 2.55
metres in diameter.
Hemp
estimates from growth rates that the arboreal behemoths are between 500 and 600
years old.
The world’s tallest trees are
not normally found in Africa: for example, a 116-metre-tall sequoia tree
grows in
North America, and a 100-metre-tall eucalyptus in Australia.
This is
probably a result of both a shortage of studies in Africa, so many trees are
overlooked,
and the fact
that many of the continent’s tree species grow in places where limited
resources
prevent
them from getting too tall.
The
latter is not the case at Kilimanjaro, where a combination of nutrient-rich
volcanic soils,
high
temperatures and precipitation have probably helped drive the growth of E. excelsum.
Supporting
life
The massive trees play
an important role in the mountain’s buzzing ecosystem, harbouring
ferns and
multiple other plants that grow on them for physical support. “They are like a
city in the forest,”
says
Hemp.
But the
green giants face the threat of illegal logging, which has plagued their
precious habitat.
The team
therefore suggests that the valleys harbouring the giants be included in the
neighbouring
Kilimanjaro
National Park for protection.
David
Seaborg at the World Rainforest Fund in Walnut Creek, California, supports this
view.
He points
out that protecting the trees could also allow us to preserve the abundance of
plants,
birds and
insects that benefit from their presence.
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