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Los misteriosos circulos del Sur de Africa estan vivos.
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Mysterious Fairy Circles Are 'Alive'
Strange formations. Fairy circles stand out against the grass after seasonal rains in Namibia's Jagkop region.
Walter Tschinkel may not have solved the mystery of the fairy
circles, but he can tell you that they're alive. Tens of thousands of
the formations—bare
patches of soil, 2 to 12 meters in diameter—freckle grasslands from
southern Angola to northern South Africa, their perimeters often marked
by a tall
fringe of grass. Locals say they're the footprints of the gods.
Scientists have thrown their hands up in the air. But now Tschinkel, a
biologist at Florida
State University in Tallahassee, has discovered something no one
else has.
Tschinkel first encountered fairy circles in 2005 on a vacation to
the NamibRand Nature Reserve, a private nature park dedicated to
conserving the local
ecology and wildlife in southwestern Namibia, where his local guide
introduced him to the strange land forms. "I looked at them and said,
'Obviously,
they're caused by termites,' " he recalls.
Perhaps the insects were
killing the grass from below, or maybe they were giving off gases
that were poisoning the vegetation. But when he and his wife returned
to
the region in 2007 and excavated a handful of fairy circles, they
found no evidence of termites.
Other experiments—adding essential
nutrients such as
zinc to the fairy circles or replacing the soil inside the circles
with the soil from outside the circles—didn't cause the vegetation to
grow back,
suggesting the formations are not the result of a lack of nutrients.
So Tschinkel turned to satellite images.
By comparing photos taken
over a 4-year period, he confirmed something other scientists had
suspected: The circles
were alive—or at least they were dynamic.
Extrapolating from the data, Tschinkel
calculated that most smaller circles arise and vanish every 24
years, whereas larger circles last up to 75 years. Overall, the lifespan
averaged 41 years.
To confirm his results, Tschinkel crunched data collected from the
NamibRand Nature Reserve.
Over the past 10 years, the park has sold
fairy circles to
ecotourists for about $50 each. The buyers don't actually get the
land; they just adopt it—kind of like people who "purchase" stars. Each
circle the
reserve sells is marked with the date of sale, and new owners are
given the latitude and longitude so they can check up on their purchase
on Google Earth.
Tschinkel's friends at the reserve revisited the sold fairy rings
and took photos to estimate the amount of regrowth that had occurred
over the years.
From
the number of fairy circles that had died or started to die over the
past 2 to 9 years, Tschinkel calculated that the fairy circles had an
average age of
about 6 decades. "It gives me some confidence that we really are
talking about a lifespan of about 30 to 60 years," he says.
Very few researchers have taken the time to investigate the fairy
circles, and their work is usually based on opportunistic experiments
done on quick
trips, Tschinkel says. "There's no program really focused on trying
to figure this out."
Fairy circle aficionados are impressed. "Tschinkel does deliver a
superb product for a one-man band," says Carl Albrecht, the head of
research at the
Cancer Association of South Africa, who occasionally researches and
publishes on the mysterious spots as a hobby.
"These are beautiful
synergies between
Google Earth, satellite photographs, aerial photographs, and actual
observations on the ground."
In the future, Tschinkel hopes to return to the region to conduct
tests at different times of year, as some of his data indicate that
circles tend to form
after the rainy season. He acknowledges that he may never get to the
bottom of what causes the fairy circles—and that's just fine with
others.
During a
recent trip, a local conservationist told Tschinkel that he hopes
the fairy circles remain a mystery for years to come. "I certainly can
sympathize with
that sentiment," Tschinkel says. "But that doesn't mean I'll stop
trying to understand."
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