Showing posts with label conservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conservation. Show all posts

Jun 22, 2026

It Works

...when we let it work


500 tortoises turned the Saharan desert into something that looked alive even from outer space

Five hundred African spurred tortoises were released into a degraded area of the Sahara desert, where their digging helped create channels for rainwater to enter the soil, resulting in scattered green growth within five years.

A conservation story is giving people a rare dose of hope about the Sahara. Five hundred tortoises were released into a severely degraded part of the desert, and within five years, satellite imagery showed green patches in areas that had been mostly sand.

The story centers on African spurred tortoises, a native species also known as Centrochelys sulcata, the Indian Defence Review reported. In 2021, researchers placed 500 of them in a degraded area on the Sahara's southern fringe, where baked, crusted soil had prevented rain from soaking in, leaving seeds with almost no chance to sprout.

"The tortoises did not plant anything," IDR said. "They dug."

These large reptiles burrow deep underground to escape brutal daytime heat and cold desert nights. Their digging breaks up the hard surface crust, creating channels for rainwater to enter the soil instead of running off the surface.

That small physical change appears to have set off a chain reaction. The shift helped moisture remain underground, gave dormant seeds a chance to sprout, and later appeared from space as scattered green growth near the tortoises' activity.

In a region where land degradation threatens food security, grazing, and rural livelihoods, healthier soil can make a real difference for nearby communities.

The tortoises are what ecologists call "ecosystem engineers," species that physically alter their surroundings in ways that help other life. Once burrows loosen the soil, insects and microorganisms move in, plants begin to take hold, and birds and small animals can follow.

Conservation and climate resilience often go hand in hand. Protecting native wildlife can help landscapes retain water, reduce erosion, and recover naturally, much like other nature-based solutions in rewilding projects and low-tech land restoration efforts in dry regions.

Researchers and conservation groups are excited, but also cautious. A 2017 ecological review described the African spurred tortoise as a species with "great ecosystem engineering potential," while IUCN reports have shown high survival rates for some reintroduced groups in Senegal, according to IDR.

Despite the encouraging results, experts stress that this is "neither a magic bullet nor a universal solution." Rainfall, grazing pressure, and ongoing land management still matter. The same tortoise that helps damaged land is also endangered, with habitat loss, climate stress, hunting, and the pet trade driving declines across its range.

Jan 6, 2019

Resources


Water is kinda the main thing we need to be concerned with.

Even the Druids knew that much.

JR Roberts, Daily Camera OpEd:

Next time you lift a glass of water to your lips, take a moment. Please reflect on where it comes from. Most people haven't a clue.

Rivers from snowpack? Only partly. Less understood is that the mountains are not really like steep roofs that shed their meltwater bounty directly to us down surface watersheds. Our mountains are more like deeply-stacked sponges. Their underlying fractured rock substrata hold far more water in their cracks than reservoirs do. Underground water flows into and out of rivers and streams all the way down and out onto the plains.

To have enough clean water, we must maintain the health and volume of our deep, spongy, groundwater exchanges.

Call Gov. Jared Polis. Demand revisions to the Colorado Water Plan that include more attention to our support base of groundwater resources. Stop pollution and protect the vital health of aquifers and wetlands.

You're drinking from a deep, giant sponge. Please, think deep.

John Roberts
Boulder


Tara Lohan, EcoWatch:


In the last few weeks of 2018, the Trump administration set the stage for a big battle over water in the new year. At stake is an important rule that defines which waters are protected under the Clean Water Act. The Trump administration seeks to roll back important protections for wetlands and waterways, which are important to drinking water and wildlife.

This is just one of the upcoming water battles that could serve to define 2019. It's also poised to be a year of reckoning on the Colorado River, which supplies water to 40 million people and 5.5 million acres of farmland. A long-anticipated multi-state agreement is close to completion after an ultimatum from the federal government. And it could also be a landmark year for water management in California, with several key issues coming to a head.

Big things may also happen on the water infrastructure front and in efforts to address clean-water concerns. Of course, underlying many of the water issues is the specter of climate change, which is bringing both severe droughts and floods and exacerbating water-supply problems.
  • Clean Water Rule Change
  • Colorado River Agreement
  • Climate Change
  • California's Grand Bargain
  • Infrastructure and Clean Water