Avoiding tree extinctions, Mauritius

  • Status of project

    Ongoing
  • Country

    Mauritius
  • Programme

    Global Trees Campaign
  • Topic

    Tree Conservation

Conservation problem

Mauritius and Rodrigues have many endemic species. Many trees have few individuals left after centuries of land use change, and threats from invasive species (plants, livestock and rats), logging, soil erosion and low seed viability. 

Project Goal

To monitor wild populations, update phenological calendars, collect seeds, propagate seedlings and plant these in protected areas and ex situ collections for the continued survival of nine threatened tree species on Rodrigues and five on Mauritius. 

Which species and why? 

The project focuses on 14 target endemic species to Mauritius and Rodrigues. Most of these are all down to the last few individuals or have proved extremely difficult to propagate and face multiple threats from land use change, invasive species and altered ecologies (either a lack of dispersers or pollinators or shifting phenologies due to climate change). The nine target species from Rodrigues are Antirhea bifurcata, Badula balfouriana, Dobeya rodriguesiana, Eugenia rodriguensis, Foetidia rodriguesiana, Hibiscus liliiflorus, Pyrostria revoluta, Polyscias rodriguesiana (completed in 2021) and Zanthoxylum paniculatum . The five target species from Mauritius are Eugenia bojeri, Ochrosia borbonica, Pandanus iceryi, Syzygium pyneei and Zanthoxylum heterophyllum. 

Zanthoxylum paniculatum flowers on Rodrigues Island

What are we doing? 

In partnership with the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation (MWF), we are doing the following activities for each of these species: 

  • Creating new species recovery plans. 
  • Monitoring wild and replanted populations. 
  • Collecting and propagating seeds and cuttings. 
  • Planting propagated individuals into protected sites, like nature reserves and the Mourouk Gene bank. 
  • Increasing the protection of remaining wild individuals. 
  • Translocating trees in danger from development. 

Key achievements 

Wild populations have been monitored to ensure the plants’ phenology is better understood and updated so that seeds can be collected when the trees are ready. 

MWF propagates many thousands of seedlings each year, of which over 1,000 individuals of 14 threatened species have been planted back into protected areas like the Grand Montagne and Anse Quitor Nature Reserves, and Ile aux Aigrettes, since the project began in 2019. 

Some of the last trees of eight of the target species (P. revoluta, Z. heterophyllum, Z. paniculatum, B. balfouriana, E. rodriguensis, F. rodriguesiana, H. liliiflorus and P. rodriguesiana) are having fences built around the surviving trees to protect them from and their progeny from livestock and other wildlife to give them a better chance of increasing natural regeneration. 

Badula balfouriana fruits wrapped in mesh to protect them from predation by rats

Plans are also under way to translocate 5 individual trees of target species, along with other trees, that are threatened by airport expansion development due to take place in 2024. This is with the support from experts from the Naples Botanical Garden, Florida. 

At the same time, more realistic plans have been developed for the Rodrigues Botanic Garden established in Mourouk, with support from an expert from the Leon Levy Native Plant Preserve. The Rodrigues Regional Assembly has accepted these plans and begun the process of implementation. 


Contact details 

For more information on this project, please contact alex.hudson@bgci.org.