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South Africa's rare succulent plants are threatened by illegal trade—how to stop it - MSNSouth Africa's succulents—small, fleshy, green plants sometimes shaped like roses or stars, and often found peeping out between rocks in dry areas—are sought after by an increasingly ...
Illegal harvesting to supply the international horticultural market threatens some of South Africa’s endemic succulent species. The plants – sought for their beauty, rarity and often whimsical shapes ...
The number of plants confiscated by South African law enforcement has increased by more than 200 percent since 2018, with over 242,000 succulents seized last year alone, according to CapeNature, a ...
A biodiversity hotspot in a remote part of South Africa has become the hub of an illegal trade in protected plant species, with organised crime groups capitalising on overseas demand. "They've not ...
This bulbous plant, a South African native, has 20-inch tall, blunt-gray leaves with wavy undulating edges. When leafless, it produces an umbel of pink to red funnel-shaped flowers. Grown by Naomi ...
The new botanical garden in Sendelingsdrif is a living bank of South Africa’s rich succulents indigenous to the Richtersveld. Many succulents are endangered — on the verge of extinction ...
South Africa's succulents - small, fleshy, green plants sometimes shaped like roses or stars, and often found peeping out between rocks in dry areas - are sought after by an increasingly ...
It is hard to obtain figures for how many plants are being poached, but the non-governmental organisation Traffic reports that 1.6 million illegally harvested succulents were seized by South ...
South Africa’s succulents – small, fleshy, green plants sometimes shaped like roses or stars, and often found peeping out between rocks in dry areas – are sought after by an increasingly ...
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