Devil of
a problem: the tree that's eating Africa
It was introduced
as a force for good. But the mesquite tree has taken to Ethiopia's
soil with such relentless enthusiasm that it threatens the
livelihood of thousands.


Caroline Irby reports
27 August 2004
In Ethiopia they call it the Devil Tree. It is both an
addiction and an affliction. In this largely pastoral country there
are many people who can't do without it: it provides shelter,
building materials, fencing for livestock, firewood, charcoal and
shade from the fierce African sun.
But the Devil Tree drives a Mephistophelian bargain. In the
30-odd years since it was introduced from Mexico, it has started to
take over the rural landscape. Now it has eaten up as much as a
quarter of all arable grazing land in some areas, leaching the earth
of the nutrients that once nurtured the grass that pastoralists rely
on to graze their cattle, their livelihood.
We know it as mesquite, or - to give it its real name -
Prosopis juliflora. It was imported in the late 1970s and early
1980s to rural areas where the tree trunks were used to shore up
irrigation dykes and as firewood.
But over time the abundant access to water and - as with so
many other introduced species - a lack of natural competition has
allowed the Devil Tree to thrive. It had a reputation as a tree
which could grow anywhere - that was part of its appeal as a fuel
wood in the first place. But Ethiopians report that it will grow up
through the floors of their huts. Its canopy has taken over ground
cover, making it hard for other plants to compete.
But it is the thorns, which grow along tendrils to three or
four inches in length, which make life nearly impossible for anyone
who has to live in an infested area. It's not just herdsmen's feet
that are affected - farmers have taken to driving on solid tyres,
according to a report from Oxfam, which also reports that injuries
from the thorns are far worse than the injuries that a normal thorn
would cause because of their size and the wound's tendency to become
infected more easily.
As you'd expect, people are looking for someone to blame for
the introduction of Devil Tree to Ethiopia and there are different
stories as to who brought the tree to the country. Some say it was
the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation. Others blame state
forestry development agencies. But whoever is at fault, it is
generally agreed that the intentions were good. No one could have
foreseen the plant's incredible invasive power.
The tree reproduced slowly during its initial 20 years in
Ethiopia. Farmers' first complaints about it came in the mid-1980s
and had nothing to do with the tree's propagation: its thorns were
stabbing their feet. Only after two gradual decades of incubation
did it begin to reproduce rampantly. But by then it had begun to
threaten the very livelihoods of the people it was meant to
help.
Ahemedu Koka used to depend on his 30 cattle to support
himself, his wife and eight children. For centuries, his ancestors
have lived as herders, wringing a living out of the barren region of
Afar, eastern Ethiopia, by walking hundreds of miles each week in
search of grassland to graze their livestock. Last year, driven from
his traditional living by the unavailability of grazing land, Mr
Koka, 38, opted for a different way of life: he now earns a living
making and selling charcoal from the Devil Tree; his two remaining
cattle stand forlornly tethered outside his hut.
For Mr Koka, life in the charcoal trade is now easier than it
was roving the arid semi-desert of Afar with camels, goats and
cattle, looking for pasture in the mesquite-blighted landscape. He
earns around Birr 500 (£35) each month from his charcoal sales: not
enough to send his children to school but sufficient to feed them.
Yet Mr Koka is a reluctant businessman: "I prefer to keep
livestock," he says, "but the environment forces us to
change."
There are 44 species of prosopis of which one, Prosopis
juliflora, was introduced to Ethiopia. Prosopis juliflora has shown
itself to be an aggressive pioneer when transplanted from its home
environment. It can withstand high temperatures, shortage of water
and saline soils; it is also a monoculture: it roots out moisture,
grows quickly to 6m tall and reaches out its branches to join
neighbouring Prosopis trees, forming a canopy that denies endemic
species beneath the water and light necessary for their
survival.
The invasiveness of the species has been aggravated in Afar
by extensive grazing. Prosopis is spread by livestock who eat its
pods and distribute them undigested in their faeces as they roam.
Consistent with its selfish character, prosopis does not share its
nutrients with the animals that eat its pods, nor are its leaves
edible. But the plant profits from the softening process that occurs
in the animals' gut for its own eventual germination. Prosopis
answers to none of herders' traditional needs: "If an animal has
ever eaten its leaves, only Allah has seen; if there's a use for
this tree, only Allah knows it," says Ibrahim Hamadou, who walks on
average 25 miles each day in search of land free of the Devil Tree
on which to graze his cattle.
The threat that prosopis represents for herders falls against
a backdrop of encroachments on their traditional grazing area. The
flooding of the Awash river, the introduction of agriculture to the
region, the sectioning-off of land for national parks and the
advancing of Issa herders from the Somali region of Ethiopia into
Afar grazing territory are also putting pressure on the pastoral
land available to Afar people.
It wasn't meant to be this way: natural forests of prosopis
are treasured in its native South America. On the basis of its
environment-enriching properties, prosopis has been introduced to
arid climates from South Africa and Australia, to India and the US.
Its 10ft roots suck minerals from the earth and fertilise the soil
as the inedible leaves decay on the surface. The deep roots also
reduce salinity in the soil by decreasing the ground-water table
level and the tree serves both as a shelter for humans and
animals.
But as in Africa, the Australians have begun to find the
Devil Tree an unwelcome guest that is almost impossible to get rid
of. It has colonised more than 800,000 hectares of arable land in
northern Australia and the authorities are racking their brains to
try to keep it under control. Various chemical solutions have been
tried without success, and at present it is only the use of
controlled burning that is inhibiting its spread.
It is the same story in the US, where infestations in New
Mexico have reduced the carrying capacity of arable land by up to 75
per cent.
A recent study concluded that prosopis infestations directly
cost the US agricultural sector about $300m (£170m), with consequent
losses to economic activity amounting to three times that
amount.
The Afar regional government in Ethiopia and the
non-governmental organisation Farm Africa are working to turn the
invasive plant into profit for the Afar people. One solution with
commercial potential is to market the wood internationally as
high-quality flooring. One company, backed by the Ethiopian
government, is negotiating to build log-processing plants in the
Afar region twinned with a final product-processing plant in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia's capital. The end product would then be shipped
from Djibouti to the US, Europe and the Middle East.
But the commercialisation of prosopis opens up a conflict of
interest between settlers and pastoralists: between those who want
to use prosopis and those whose very lives are seriously affected.
"Pastoralists want to see the plant eliminated. They don't want to
hear about any negotiations with prosopis," says Dr Taffese Mesfin,
pastoral programme adviser for Farm Africa.
Ahemedu Koka's returns from selling charcoal illustrate one
initiative that appears to be benefiting pastoralists - if modestly.
Charcoal production is currently illegal in most of Ethiopia, due to
the virtual wiping out of the country's neem and acacia forests, but
the government has allowed one charcoal association to open in the
Middle Awash Valley, the area where prosopis has propagated most
fervently, and where Mr Koka has settled.
Another enterprise which is designed to help pastoralists to
profit from their enemy will open nearby later this year. The
regional government has bought four machines to crush prosopis pods,
which will both reduce the number of seeds germinating and create
protein-rich feed for cattle, to be sold by the pastoralists.
Communities have begun to collect pods and are being trained to
operate the machinery. It won't make a big impact on the spread of
the tree: even where no livestock is present to disseminate the many
pods, warthogs run wild sowing the seed.
But Dr Taffese is determined to work with the invader. "It's
no good condemning it," he states. "If we don't do anything about
prosopis, we can't talk about development. We have to understand its
better uses."
The pastoralist way of life is moulded on the ecosystem in
which they live. Prosopis is now part of the ecosystem; it is an
alien species for which pastoralists have no traditional use, but
the plant has potential. Though each of the countries where it has
been introduced is struggling to control infestations, the
marketability of prosopis is also exploited: prosopis is used to
make timber and charcoal in the US, animal fodder in Brazil, gum in
India and honey in Mexico, where restrictions are now in place on
the plant for fear of its overuse.
Dubale Admassu, an animal scientist working on the control of
prosopis in Afar, says: "We'll take the Afars to Mexico and the
Mexicans to Afar: then we'll learn what to do with this plant!"
Pastoralism is all about adapting to change, and faced with the near
impossibility of eliminating the tree from their land, pastoralists
could begin to consider the thorny invader as a blessing very well
disguised.
PLANTS THAT OUTGREW THEIR WELCOME
BANMARA PLANTS
Invaded central and eastern Nepal from India. Named the
"forest killer" by locals, these plants are one of the biggest
threats to biodiversity in Nepal and cause economic damage. As
cattle do not eat them, the farmers are forced to travel farther in
search of new grazing areas.
KILLER ALGAE
Originally a tropical alga that needs water temperatures
above 20C, it jumped from the aquariums of the Ocean Museum in Nice
into the Mediterranean. Here it mutated to cope with the cooler
water temperatures and now covers more than 6,000 hectares of
seabed.
GIANT HOGWEED
Originated in the Caucasus and was introduced as a garden
plant to England in the 19th century. From here it spread along
riverbeds from Scandinavia to France and Switzerland. The shrub
produces a toxin which is potentially dangerous to humans and
animals.
FIREWEED AND FOUNTAIN GRASS
A major threat to the habitat in Hawaii. Fireweed is toxic to
animals and causes severe liver damage in cattle. Fountain grass
overgrows local plants and poses a major fire risk.
HIMALAYAN BALSAM
Made its way from India into English gardens in the 19th
century. The plant spreads quickly along riverbed. The plant juice
is toxic to humans.
Stephan Schepers