Unbelievable! See the Mysterious Tree That Can Walk From One Spot to Another (Photo+Video)
Socratea exorrhiza dubbed the walking tree
Socratea
exorrhiza also called the walking tree has been dubbed a mystery in
Latin America as it is known to be the only tree in the world that walks
and can move up to 20 meters per year.
The mystery of the walking tree has been explained as a phenomena
and one of the rarest things on earth. The Socratea exorrhiza is perhaps
the world’s only mobile tree.
They say its complicated system of roots also serves as legs,
helping the tree constantly move towards sunlight as the seasons change.
Walking trees can apparently move up to 2-3 cm per day, or 20 meters
per year. That may not sound like much, but it’s pretty much a marathon
by tree-standards.
The story of this amazing type of tree has been told all over Latin
America like an ancient story of pride by rainforest guides in Latin
American countries like Ecuador. Many tourists are amazed to discover
this fact. The most common version of the story is that the tree slowly
‘walks’ in search of the sun by growing new roots towards the light and
allowing its old roots to die. The unusual roots, split from the trunk a
few feet above the ground, add to the illusion of the tree having legs.
The walking tree is known to grow very tall
“As the soil erodes, the tree grows new, long roots that find new and more solid ground, sometimes up to 20m,”
explained Peter Vrsansky, a palaeobiologist from the Slovak Academy of
Sciences who lived for a few months in the Unesco Sumaco Biosphere
Reserve, about a day’s journey from Ecuador’s capital Quito.
“Then, slowly, as the roots settle in the new soil and the tree
bends patiently towards the new roots, the old roots slowly lift into
the air. The whole process for the tree to relocate to a new place with
better sunlight and more solid ground can take a couple of years.”
According to Wikipedia, “John H. Bodley suggested in 1980 that
they in fact allow the palm to “walk” away from the point of germination
if another tree falls on the seedling and knocks it over. If such an
event occurs then the palm produces new vertical stilt roots and can
then right itself, the original roots rotting away.”
Unsurprisingly, most scientists don’t believe that the walking
trees can actually relocate. According to a Live Science article from
2012: “A tree that walks in search of the sun is a fascinating,
bizarre story. Alas, it’s not true; the tree is real enough, but it
doesn’t walk. It sits where it sprouted, not moving except under the
force of wind (or an axe).”
Gerardo Avalos, a biologist and director of the Center for
Sustainable Development Studies in Costa Rica, happens to be one of the
world’s top experts on the Socratea exorrhiza species. And he agrees
that the walking tree can’t really walk, based on extensive analysis he
conducted in 2005. “My paper proves that the belief of the walking palm is just a myth,” he told Life’s Little Mysteries.
“Thinking that a palm tree could actually track canopy light
changes by moving slowly over the forest floor… is a myth that tourist
guides find amusing to tell visitors to the rainforest.”
Myth or not, the walking trees continue to fascinate tourists visiting Ecuador.
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