Tuesday, February 5, 2008
Search Site:
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Archives | Feedback | Career Avenues
News
National
State
District
City
Business
Foreign
Sports
Comments
Edit Page
Panorama
Net Mail
Your Take
Infoline
In City Today
HelpLine
Daily Almanac
Festivals of India
Weather
Leisure
Crossword
Horoscope
Year 2008
Weekly
Daily Astrospeak
Calendar 2008
Pearls of Wisdom
"All political parties die at last of swallowing their own lies."
- John Arbuthnot
Supplements
Metro Life - Mon
Movie Reviews
DH Avenues
Hi Life
Metro Life - Thurs
Economy & Business
Metro Life - Fri
Open Sesame
Metro Life - Sat
Living
DH Realty
Fine Art / Culture
Articulations
Entertainment
Science & Technology
Spectrum
Sportscene
She
Sunday Herald
DH Education
ENGLISH FOR YOU
Reviews
Book Reviews
ENVIRONMENT
Cyber Space
Bangalore IT.in
Dasara dazzle
Art Reviews
Columns
Kuldip Nayar
Khushwant Singh
N J Nanporia
Tavleen Singh
Swami Sukhabodhananda
Bittu Sehgal
Suresh Menon
Shreekumar Varma
Movie Guide
Ad Links
Deccan
International School
Real Estate Properties in Bangalore
Deccan Herald
Now Available
Globally
in Print Format
Others
About Us
Subscription

Send your Suggestions / Queries about the Website to the
Webmaster


To send letters to Editor :
Letters to Editor

You are welcome to post your letters/responses to NETMAIL here.

For enquiries on advertisements :
Contact Us

Deccan Herald » Science & Technology » Detailed Story
Palm mystery
A gigantic palm that flowers itself to death has been discovered in Madagascar. This previously unknown genus is entirely new to science and has been named Tahina spectabilis.

It started as a simple family picnic in the outback of Madagascar, off Africa's southeast coast. Xavier and Nathalie Metz, local cashew farmers, stared in disbelief at a 30-foot-tall mass of flowers and fruits sprouting gloriously from the top of a 30-foot-tall palm tree.

They had seen the same tree on an outing a year earlier, when it was not in bloom, and had presumed it to be a species common to that region. But the enormous floral display convinced them on that day in 2006 that they were witnessing something rare.

Adding to their sense of awe was what they found on follow-up visits: Having thrown itself so completely into that spectacle of reproductive ardour, the huge tree soon collapsed in a depleted heap and died.
Now, scientists have confirmed just how unusual that tree was, and how rare are the 92 specimens that have since been found.

The palm, which researchers say essentially "flowers itself to death," is not only a new species. It has forced palm biologists to invent an entirely new genus to accommodate it. That is an almost unheard of event in modern palm tree classification, but one made necessary by its many unique traits and by DNA testing suggesting the tree has been evolving independently of other palms for millions of years.

"For botanists, it's equivalent to finding a large mammal in some unexpected place," said William Baker, a palm biologist at Kew Gardens in London, which has been a key player in bringing the weird tree to scientific light.
The discovery, documented in the Jan 17 issue of the Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, is bringing new attention to palms, an ancient and biologically peculiar family of flowering plants. It is also helping to highlight the predicament Madagascar faces as population growth, poverty and poor land management conspire to destroy the last vestiges of that island's ecological magnificence.

"So much of Madagascar's landscape is absolutely shattered by human activity," said Scott Zona, a palm biologist at Florida International University in Miami. "These palms were growing at the base of a little hill, nestled in a ravine, and were protected from the fires and cultivation that have been going on there. The area is all rice paddy now but was probably a forest that was full of this palm."

An estimated 90 per cent of Madagascar's 10,000 plant species are found nowhere else in the world. Yet a mere 18 per cent of the island nation's native vegetation remains undisturbed by human activity, and one-third of its vegetative cover has disappeared in the past three decades alone.

In December 2006, a palm enthusiast living on the island saw some pictures that the Metzes had taken on their picnic and posted them on PalmTalk, an online chat room.

"I could hardly believe my eyes when I saw the images posted on the Web," said John Dransfield, a research fellow at Kew and co-author of the Field Guide to the Palms of Madagascar. "Clearly this was going to be an exciting discovery, and I just couldn't wait to examine them in detail."

A Kew PhD student doing research in Madagascar was called upon to hike into the area, retrieve samples and send them to England. Careful analysis of the stems, leaves and other parts, along with DNA analysis, confirmed that the tree belongs in a genus of its own — one that has been called Tahina, which in the Malagasy language means "to be protected."

Tahina spectabilis (from the Latin for "spectacular") is a huge palm, with fan-shaped leaves as big as 15 feet across. As is the case with most palms, the leaves are arranged in a way that appears to minimise the amount they shade each other.

T spectabilis is one of just a few species of "suicide palm" worldwide: trees that grow for decades, then throw every last bit of energy they have into an ultimately fatal reproductive frenzy. Some scientists call it "explosive" or "big bang" reproduction, but it is a slow-motion explosion, in which hundreds of thousands of flowers will bloom, attracting pollinators that, depending on the palm, may be beetles, bees or bats.

Most palms, including Tahina, produce fruits that are eaten by birds and small mammals, which then disperse the seeds.

But that relatively limited capacity to spread their seeds raises one of the biggest mysteries about Tahina: How did it get to Madagascar? The three genera of palms most closely related to it, and with which Tahina must share a common ancestor, all live far away, in Central Asia, China and Thailand. Some suspect a seed may have rafted across a huge expanse of sea. Others wonder whether the ancestor originated on Madagascar, and some specimens rode northward on fragments of a continent that broke up more than 100 million years ago, portions of it drifting toward Asia.

"It just shows how little we know about these organisms," said Andrew Henderson, a curator at the New York Botanical Garden, who called the find "an amazing discovery." No one knows how old Tahina must get before it flowers. Unlike most trees, palms do not have tree rings that allow scientists to check their age because palms remain underground during their first years of life, until their trunks have reached their full adult girth. Only then do they grow skyward.

Rick Weiss The Washington Post

comment on this article
Other Headlines
Palm mystery
STEM the damage
Anaerobics
Ad Links
Flowers to India , Gifts to India
Your Life Partner? Get personalized proposals daily. Thousands of New members with Photo Profiles. Profession,Religion, Community searches & more. Register FREE!
Gifts to India, Flowers to India, Gifts to India, Bangalore, Gifts to India, Mumbai, Delhi, Rakhi
Gifts to India , Flowers to Bangalore India
No minimum balance NRI account
India Flowers - Dehradun Hyderabad Kolkata Gurgaon Punjab
Flowers to India Flowers Gifts Delhi Bangalore Mumbai Chennai
Flowers to Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi, Mumbai, Pune Kolkata.
Send Flowers, Cakes, Chocolate, Fruits to Pune.
Flowers to India , France , Japan, Germany, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mexico, USA
Flowers to India , Mumbai , Pune, Delhi, Chennai,
click here
Copyright 2007, The Printers (Mysore) Private Ltd., 75, M.G. Road, Post Box No 5331, Bangalore - 560001
Tel: +91 (80) 25880000 Fax No. +91 (80) 25880523
200x200
Gender:MaleFemale

Email:

click here
click here
click here