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Socotra: Why this Yemeni island is called the most alien place on Earth

Socotra: Why this Yemeni island is called the most alien place on Earth

The Socotra archipelago, located in the Indian Ocean, has been referred to as the most alien place on Earth because of its bizarre, long-lost, and otherworldly features. The Socotra archipelago has been separated from the African mainland for 18 million years and has evolved into an evolutionary laboratory due to its isolation. UNESCO reports that approximately 37 per cent of its 825 flowering plants are endemic, meaning they exist only on Socotra and nowhere else in the world. The Dragon’s Blood Tree is by far the most famous of the plants found on Socotra. This plant has an umbrella-shaped canopy that collects water from mists forming on the mountain tops; thus, it is an evolutionary wonder. In addition to the unique biology of the Socotra archipelago, the IUCN World Heritage Outlook states that Socotra is considered the ‘Galapagos of the Indian Ocean’ and goes against the normal standards of nature.

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Reason for calling Socotra, the most alien place on Earth

Socotra is called the most alien place on Earth primarily because the geology of this island has undergone extreme changes over many millions of years. The islands forming today’s Socotra were all originally part of the former supercontinent known as Gondwana. They separated from the Gondwana supercontinent during the Miocene Epoch (approximately 18 million years ago), creating a biological time capsule in the Indian Ocean. According to the paper published on ResearchGate, Socotra is a ‘continental fragment,’ not an island that formed by a volcanic process, like most other islands, and it has been a separate landmass from Africa for approximately eighteen million years. The millions of years of time that Socotra has remained isolated from the African continent have demonstrated the power of vicariant speciation. Because the island was physically severed from the mainland by tectonic shifts, its flora and fauna were forced to adapt to Socotra’s unique limestone plateaus and semi-desert climate in total isolation from their African ancestors

What makes Socotra famous for

According to the UNEP-WCMC World Heritage Datasheet, the trees are the most well-known inhabitants of this island, which look like something out of a science fiction novel. The Dragon’s Blood Tree (scientific name Dracaena cinnabari): It has a unique umbrella shape developed through evolution to provide shade for the roots while capturing moisture from mountain mists in an otherwise dry, arid climate.The Socotran Bottle Tree (scientific name Adenium obesum subsp. socotranum): It is more commonly called the Desert Rose. They have large, bulging trunks that hold large volumes of water throughout the year. As a result, they produce beautiful, pink blossoms at all times, even during periods of extreme drought.

The ‘Galapagos of the Indian Ocean’

Socotra Island is often likened to the Galapagos Islands by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) because of the great diversity and number of endemic species that it supports.According to the United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre’s (UNEP-WCMC) World Heritage Data Sheet, Socotra is home to an astonishing variety of organisms that are not found anywhere else: 37% of the plants; 90% of the reptiles; 95% of the terrestrial snails.And the Socotra Starling and Socotra Sunbird are two species that serve as important biological indicators of the overall health of the island’s ecosystems.

What are the conservation challenges

Although the island looks alien, its threats are very much of this world. Climate change and changes to the way local people use their land are threatening this ‘living museum’ of great ecological significance. Increasing amounts of heavy rainfall from cyclones in the Indian Ocean will have a devastating effect on the already slow-growing Dragon’s Blood Forests.Organisations such as the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) work with local community members to help them continue to meet modern needs while ensuring the remaining elements of a UNESCO World Heritage site, inscribed in 2008, are preserved. Go to Source

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