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Related: About this forumThese Fairytale Trees Only Grow at Incredible Altitudes
These Fairytale Trees Only Grow at Incredible Altitudes
by Karen Catchpole / 15 Oct 2015
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Polylepis tree limbs intertwine overhead in the forest around Polylepis Lodge in Ecuador.
(All photos: Eric Mohl)
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What has red, peeling skin and is found only in the Andes? Polylepis trees, some of the oddest and rarest trees on the planet. This genus thrives only in the cold mist and thin air of the Andes Mountains, and one of the rarest types of Polylepis can be seen only in northern Ecuador.
The name Polylepis (which is pronounced pah-lee-LEH-piss) comes from the Greek words for many (poly) and layers (letis). Its a fitting moniker, since the bark of the Polylepis is composed of thin, deep red layer that collectively make up a skin hearty enough to stand up to a cold, wet, and windy environment. These layers peel naturally in paper-like sheets, inspiring the easier-to-pronounce nickname paper tree.
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There are more than 20 different types of Polylepis trees and shrubs and all of them have a gnarled, wind-swept, otherworldly look.
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There are more than 20 species of shrubs and trees in the Polylepis genus, which is part of the rose family, and all of them are exclusively found in the Andes from northern Venezuela to Northern Chile and Argentina. They grow at elevations up to 16,400 feet, which makes Polylepis one of the highest naturally occurring genuses of tree in the world.
Theyre also one of the slowest-growing trees in the world; some take more than 100 years to growing half an inch in diameter. They grow faster at milder, lower elevations, where the trees can reach heights approaching 150 feet. Scientists speculate that vast areas of the Andes were once covered in Polylepis trees, but over time they were cut to clear the way for grazing animals and to provide firewood and building materials for the areas indigenous populations, including the Incas.
More:
http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/these-fairytale-trees-only-grow-at-incredible-altitudes
Science:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/122842927
KT2000
(20,577 posts)forest444
(5,902 posts)I imagine they must be relatives of the Chilean Myrtle trees (Arrayanes, in Spanish) that are so common to the lake country shared by Chile and Argentina.
Famously, it was in Los Arrayanes National Park, in Southwest Argentina, that Walt Disney wrote much of Bambi. This was the spot: