The Avenue of the Baobabs | Madagascar
The Avenue or Alley of the Baobabs
is a prominent group of baobab trees lining the dirt road between
Morondava and Belon'i Tsiribihina in the Menabe region in western
Madagascar. Its striking landscape draws travelers from around the
world, making it one of the most visited locations in the region. It has
been a center of local conservation efforts, and was granted temporary
protected status in July 2007 by the Ministry of Environment, Water and
Forests, the first step toward making it Madagascar's first natural
monument. Along the Avenue in some 260 m long segment are remaining some
20 - 25 trees about 30 meters in height, of the species Adansonia
grandidieri, endemic to Madagascar. Some 20 - 25 more trees of this
species grow in nearby rice paddies and meadows.
Image credit Ahaano
Baobab trees,
up to 800 years old, known locally as renala (Malagasy for "mother of
the forest"), are a legacy of the dense tropical forests that once
thrived on Madagascar. The trees did not originally tower in isolation
over the sere landscape of scrub but stood in dense forest. Over the
years, as the country's population grew, the forests were cleared for
agriculture, leaving only the baobab trees, which the locals preserved
as much in respect as for their value as a food source and building
material. [Source | Wikipedia]
Image credit NU Helicon
Image credit The Little Window
Image credit laetitia.navarro
Image credit Taishi Maehara
Image credit Taishi Maehara
Image credit Takayuki Izumi
Image credit Alessandro Casagrande
Image credit Laszlo Bolgar
Image credit Taishi Maehara
Image credit laetitia.navarro
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