
South Africa's iconic King Protea heads north as climate warms
On his farm two hours north of Johannesburg, Nico Thuynsma gestured towards thousands of orange, yellow and pink proteas in flower and thriving 1 500km from their natural home at the southern tip of Africa.
'They're all different,' the 55-year-old farmer said of the assorted blooms from the diverse Proteaceae family that has more than 350 species in South Africa, from firework-like 'pincushion' varieties to delicate 'blushing brides'.
He picked out a majestic pink and white crown, nearly the size of his head, that has taken four years to reach its impressive size.
'The King Proteas are very slow to grow,' Thuynsma said.
The largest of the proteas, the King Protea, is South Africa's national flower.
It has lent its name to the national cricket team and countless brands. It features on the currency and is the logo for South Africa's presidency this year of the G20 group of leading economies, which convenes a summit in November.
It is also the country's largest flower export with more than 10 million stems sent abroad last year, worth close to R275 million, according to the Cape Flora industry organisation.
Its status offers the King Protea some protection but almost half of South Africa's other protea species face extinction because of pressures on their native habitats in the mountains of the Cape, according to South Africa's National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI).
These include habitat loss to agriculture, the proliferation of invasive alien species and 'changes to natural fire cycles', SANBI said in a 2021 report.
'People come to South Africa to see proteas,' Nigel Barker, a professor in plant sciences at the University of Pretoria, told AFP.
'It's the plant equivalent of the elephant or the lion.' The protea has lent its name to the national cricket team, features on the currency and is the logo for South Africa's G20 presidency. Image: Phill Magakoe / AFP
Most proteas are endemic or semi-endemic to the Cape Floral Kingdom biome of 'fynbos' ('fine bush') that stretches across the southern tip of South Africa and is one of the world's richest flora biodiversity hotspots.
But climate projections predict 'hotter, drier conditions', Barker said.
'We'll be looking at a completely different vegetation type in the future, semi-desert almost in some places.'
'Many species, because they're so range-restricted, will probably go extinct under those scenarios,' he said. 'People come to South Africa to see proteas,' says Nigel Barker, a professor in plant sciences at the University of Pretoria warned. Image: Phill Magakoe / AFP
'The only solution we have is to cultivate them artificially… in greenhouses or farms where you control irrigation,' Barker said.
An example is Thuynsma's farm in the grasslands of the north, where he began planting proteas three decades ago.
Here, winters are dry and frosty, and the summers rainy – conditions very different to those in the far south where the proteas are at home.
Through trial and error, Thuynsma has been able to cultivate close to 200 protea varieties, including some long forgotten and abandoned by farmers in their original habitats.
In his latest experiment, he has planted 36 varieties with just two litres (four pints) of saturated gel for irrigation. Through trial and error, Thuynsma has been able to cultivate close to 200 protea varieties. Image: Phill Magakoe / AFP
'I hope to unlock the power of some of these varieties,' Thuynsma said.
'They come from the Western Cape out of very harsh conditions, so they do have it in them.'
'I learn from them, I learn with them. And, hopefully, in the future I can advise my nursery public – and even estates – how to plant this lovely fynbos without irrigation,' he said.
'I don't think I have a solution for climate change,' he joked, crouched over a small seedling in freshly turned soil. 'But I do have a solution: to plant proteas.'
A few metres (yards) away, in a warm nursery, thousands of protea sprouts awaited their turn in the soil.
'I love them, I protect them, I collect them,' Thuynsma said.
'The protea is part of South Africa's DNA.'
Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1
Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.
By Garrin Lambley © Agence France-Presse

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


eNCA
6 days ago
- eNCA
Italian sculptor Arnaldo Pomodoro dies aged nearly 99
Italian sculptor Arnaldo Pomodoro, renowned for his huge bronze spheres, died at the weekend, a day before his 99th birthday, his foundation said on Monday. Born in the northern region of Emilia-Romagna on June 23, 1926, Pomodoro began investigating solid geometric forms in the early 1960s. He created monumental spheres, cones, columns and cubes in polished bronze, whose perfectly smooth exteriors split open to reveal interiors that were corroded, torn or simply hollowed out. This "contrast between the smooth perfection of the geometric form and the chaotic complexity of the interior" became his trademark, the Milan-based foundation said on its website. Prime Minister Georgia Meloni said on X that Pomodoro, who died at his home in Milan on Sunday, had "sculpted Italy's soul". "The art world has lost one of its most influential, insightful and visionary voices," added foundation director Carlotta Montebello. AFP | MAXIMILIEN LAMY Pomodoro was one of Italy's most prominent contemporary artists. He won numerous awards and taught at Stanford University, Berkley and Mills College in the United States. His iconic works grace public spaces the world over -– at the Vatican in Rome, the United Nations and the Guggenheim Museum in New York, UNESCO headquarters in Paris, the Universal Exhibition in Shanghai and Trinity College Dublin.


eNCA
22-06-2025
- eNCA
Chad hopes 'green charcoal' can save vanishing forests
N'DJAMENA - As they zigzagged from one machine to another in the searing African sun, the workers were covered in black soot. But the charcoal they were making is known as "green", and backers hope it can save impoverished Chad from rampant deforestation. Chad, a vast, landlocked country of 19 million people perched at the crossroads of north and central Africa, is steadily turning to desert. It has lost more than 90 percent of its forest cover since the 1970s, hit by climate change and overexploitation of trees for household uses such as cooking, officials say. "Green charcoal" aims to protect what forest is left. Made from discarded plant waste such as millet and sesame stalks or palm fronds, it is meant to save trees from being chopped down for cooking. The product "releases less emissions than traditional charcoal, it doesn't blacken your pots, it has high energy content and lasts up to three times longer than ordinary charcoal," said Ousmane Alhadj Oumarou, technical director of the Raikina Association for Socioeconomic Development (Adser). "Using one kilogram of green charcoal saves six kilograms of wood." The group has installed a production facility in Pont Belile, just north of the capital, N'Djamena. There, workers grind up burnt plant waste, then mix it with gum arabic, which helps it ignite, and clay, which makes it burn more slowly. The resulting black nuggets look like ordinary charcoal. Like the traditional kind, it emits CO2 when it burns -- but less, said Souleymane Adam Adey, an ecologist at the University of N'Djamena. And "it contributes to fighting deforestation, by ensuring the trees that aren't cut down continue to capture and store carbon," he said. - Refugee pressure - The conflict in neighbouring Sudan, which is facing one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world, is adding to pressure on Chad, which has become home to more than 800,000 Sudanese refugees since 2023 -- double the 400,000 it already hosted. AFP | Joris Bolomey "Desertification has progressed in the regions that have been hosting Sudanese refugees for the past two years," said Adser's director, 45-year-old businessman Ismael Hamid. Adser invested 200 million CFA francs (about $350,000) to launch the project, then won backing from the World Bank, which buys the charcoal for 750 CFA francs per kilogramme. The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, distributes the charcoal in refugee camps in eastern Chad. But Hamid said he hoped to expand production and slash prices to 350 to 500 CFA francs per kilo to make "green charcoal" available and affordable nationwide. AFP | Joris Bolomey The plant currently produces seven to nine tonnes per day. "If we want to meet the country's needs, we have to increase our output by at least a factor of 10," said Hamid, calling for subsidies to support the budding sector. Environment Minister Hassan Bakhit Djamous told AFP the government was working on a policy to promote such projects. "We need to bet on green charcoal as an energy source for the future of our country," he said.
![Eight dead in Brazil hot air balloon accident [VIDEOS]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia.citizen.co.za%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2025%2F06%2FBrazil-hot-air-balloon.jpg&w=3840&q=100)
![Eight dead in Brazil hot air balloon accident [VIDEOS]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmedia.citizen.co.za%2Fassets%2Fimg%2Fcitizen-icon.png&w=48&q=75)
The Citizen
21-06-2025
- The Citizen
Eight dead in Brazil hot air balloon accident [VIDEOS]
After the balloon erupted in flames, the basket carrying the passengers plummeted to the ground. A rescue team member stands at the crash site after a hot air balloon carrying 21 people caught fire and plunged, in Praia Grande, State of Santa Catarina, southern Brazil, on 21 June 2025. Picture: Handout / Santa Catarina Fire Department / AFP At least eight people were killed on Saturday when a hot air balloon with 21 passengers caught fire in southern Brazil, said the governor of Santa Catarina state, where the incident occurred. 'Eight fatalities and 13 survivors,' Governor Jorginho Mello said on X. Hot air balloon erupted in flames Videos taken by bystanders and carried on Brazilian television showed the moment when the balloon erupted in flames above the coastal town of Praia Grande. The weather conditions were clear. At least 8 people died after a hot air balloon carrying 22 crashed in Praia Grande, Santa Catarina, Brazil, catching fire mid-air. #PraiaGrande #Balão #Tragédia_SC — GeoTechWar (@geotechwar) June 21, 2025 The basket carrying the passengers plummeted dozens of metres to the ground in flames. 'We still have no information' about the condition of the survivors, a spokeswoman for Santa Catarina firefighters told AFP. Praia Grande, on the Atlantic coast, is a popular destination for hot-air ballooning in Brazil. The survivors were being treated in area hospitals, firefighters said. An investigation was launched to determine the cause of the accident. 'I want to express my solidarity with the families of the victims,' Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said in a statement. Fire sparked by blowtorch The pilot told officials that the fire was sparked by a blowtorch in the basket, Tiago Luiz Lemos, a police official in Praia Grande, told local media. The pilot tried to bring the balloon down as soon as the fire erupted, 'and once it was close to the ground, he told the passengers to jump from the basket. But some of them couldn't do it and the fire grew,' the official said. One witness told the Razao newspaper that he saw 'two people falling, they were on fire, the basket broke off and the balloon fell'. It was the second fatal balloon accident in the country in just a few days. Less than a week ago, a woman died during a ride in southeastern Sao Paulo state. NOW READ: India's civil aviation authority says 242 people on board crashed Air India plane to London