Science & technology | Long-standing mystery

How bush pigs saved Madagascar’s baobabs

Non-native species are not always harmful

The sun sets behind the baobab trees.
A long-standing mysteryPhotograph: Panos PIctures/ Justin Jin

THE MALAGASY baobab tree, whose thick trunks and tiny branches dot Madagascar’s landscape, should not, by rights, have survived to the present day. Scientists believe that its large seeds were once dispersed by the giant tortoises and gorilla-size giant lemurs that roamed the island. When these species went extinct over one thousand years ago owing to human activity, the baobab tree should have vanished too. It did not. Seheno Andriantsaralaza at the University of Antananarivo in Madagascar and Onja Razafindratsima at the University of California, Berkeley, now think they may know the reason why.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “In hog heaven”

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