Thorn tree of Africa
Thorns are no defence against the plant eaters of Africa.
The acacia tree can cope in the hard savannah environment, because its shallow roots can extract any moisture from the soil above the hard ash pan, and its tiny leaves reduce water lost to evaporation. These small leaves are nutritious enough to support the world’s tallest animal, the giraffe, which is lofty enough to exploit a niche that no others can reach. But the acacia crown is not only attacked from the top down but also from the bottom up! The gerenuk has a skeleton that's adapted so it can spend all day standing on its hind legs to eat. The dik dik is one of Africa’s shortest antelopes, and at ground level the acacia thorns are at their fiercest. But the dik dik's tiny head fits perfectly between the spikes and so the acacia is attacked from every angle. The acacia can just about cope with the impact of nibblers like these, but seedling acacias are simply annihilated by the elephant, and adult trees aren’t safe either! The elephant’s trunk is sensitive enough to select individual leaves but strong enough to rip off entire branches. The combination of tusk and trunk makes short work of heavy wood, and a single African elephant can flatten a tree a day.
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