19-05-2025
These trees exist in only one place on Earth — Now climate change and goats threaten their survival
But it's the dragon's blood tree that has long captured imaginations, its otherworldly form seeming to belong more to the pages of Dr. Seuss than to any terrestrial forest. The island receives about 5,000 tourists annually, many drawn by the surreal sight of the dragon's blood forests.
Visitors are required to hire local guides and stay in campsites run by Socotran families to ensure tourist dollars are distributed locally. If the trees were to disappear, the industry that sustains many islanders could vanish with them.
'With the income we receive from tourism, we live better than those on the mainland,' said Mubarak Kopi, Socotra's head of tourism.
But the tree is more than a botanical curiosity: It's a pillar of Socotra's ecosystem. The umbrella-like canopies capture fog and rain, which they channel into the soil below, allowing neighboring plants to thrive in the arid climate.
'When you lose the trees, you lose everything — the soil, the water, the entire ecosystem,' said Kay Van Damme, a Belgian conservation biologist who has worked on Socotra since 1999.
Without intervention, scientists like Van Damme warn these trees could disappear within a few centuries — and with them many other species.
'We've succeeded, as humans, to destroy huge amounts of nature on most of the world's islands,' he said. 'Socotra is a place where we can actually really do something. But if we don't, this one is on us.'