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Date Palm Diversity

Oases are hotspots of biological and cultural diversity – for their protection and sustainable use, a new study recommends that culture and biodiversity should be considered together


A research team led by Prof. Dr. Klement Tockner, Director General of the Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung and Professor of Ecosystem Sciences at the Goethe University Frankfurt, has investigated the relationship between cultural and biological diversity for selected oases in the Sahara. In their study, now published in the scientific journal PLOS ONE, the researchers show that oases are centers of biocultural diversity, using Algeria as a concrete example. Since culture and biodiversity are particularly closely linked in these unique desert habitats, they should be considered together when it comes to measures for sustainable use and protection, postulate the researchers.

Arid regions are home to diverse nomadic cultures, a unique diversity of fauna and flora, and a quarter of the world’s languages. While species richness in arid areas is lower than in humid habitats such as tropical forests, deserts are home to a variety of particularly well-adapted and unique animals and plants. At the same time, diversity within species is especially pronounced due to the varying features and the isolation of individual ecosystems. Oases – green, fertile islands within desert areas – play a central role in this. “For oases in the Sahara, the diversity of agriculturally used plant and animal species is particularly important,” explains the study’s corresponding author, Dr. Juan Antonio Hernández-Agüero, a former scientific assistant at the Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum in Frankfurt who now works at the VrijeUniversiteit Amsterdam, and he continues, “Date palm oases are a typical example. In addition to the economic importance of the fruits, they exhibit high genetic diversity and provide habitats and refuges for a variety of animals. Here, the close link between the evolution of human culture and biodiversity is particularly evident.”

To better understand the potential mechanisms of biocultural diversity in the Sahara, the scientists took a closer look at Algeria’s oases and analyzed the interrelationships among various factors of biological and cultural diversity – such as the number of animal and plant species and the number of ethnic groups and languages. “We studied 77 very different oases and 18 oasis groups,” reports Hernández-Agüero, and he continues, “Collectively, the oases harbor 552 plant species, 14 amphibian species, 328 bird species, 98 mammal species, and 72 reptile species, although the diversity can be much higher. In addition, the Algerian oases are home to twelve ethnic populations, each speaking their own language, including five endangered languages. Thus, of the total of 22 languages found in Algeria – a country with only moderate diversity from a global perspective – over half are spoken in oases. Eight out of ten endangered large vertebrate species in the Sahara-Sahel region find refugia here. Oases are obviously of immense importance for the biocultural diversity of the entire country. Moreover, at the level of individual oases, we found a strong correlation between the number of species and languages.”

Globalization processes, the industrialization of agriculture, and tourism increasingly contribute to changes in the Sahara’s oases as well. Besides traditional produce such as dates and olives, tomatoes and other vegetables are increasingly being grown there for hotels and restaurants. This is exacerbated by activities such as oil drilling and uranium mining. “Over countless generations, traditional local cultivation practices have ensured the protection of biodiversity,” explains Prof. Dr. Klement Tockner, initiator and leader of the study, and he continues, “It is therefore crucial to consider biological and cultural diversity together in order to sustainably use as well as protect oases in the Sahara – and also globally – in terms of their diversity and importance for humans. After all, around 450 million people in North Africa and Asia live in or near oases. Because of their natural resources, oases are among the most densely populated habitats in the world. And they are more severely threatened than ever before.”

“The concept of biocultural diversity supports a holistic and interconnected view of nature and humans,” adds Hernández- Agüero in summary, and he concludes, “Our study is intended as an impetus for a more profound analysis of the mechanisms of biocultural diversity in oases in order to develop the best possible sustainable use and protection concepts for these unique habitats.”

From August 31 to September 1, 2023, the Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum Frankfurt hosts the international Senckenberg-UNESCO workshop “Oases of the World: Status, Values, Futures.”

Publication:
Tydecks L, Hernández-Agüero JA, Böhning-Gaese K, Bremerich V, Jeschke JM, Schütt B, et al. (2023) Oases in the Sahara Desert– Linking biological and cultural diversity. PLoS ONE 18(8): e0290304. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290304

Press Material

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Oases are centers of biological and cultural diversity in the Sahara Desert (here Mides, Tunesia). Photo: Antonio Santoro

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The diversity of species used in agriculture plays a special role – date palm oases such as Zagora in Morocco exhibit a high level of genetic diversity and provide habitats for a wide range of animals. Photo: Muriel Gros-Balthazard

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Over many generations, traditional local cultivation practices have ensured the protection of biodiversity – for the sustainable use of oases, culture and nature should be considered together. Pictured here: Marrakech, Morocco. Photo: Muriel Gros-Balthazard