Latin America
Related: About this forumSee stunning photos of the Atacama Desert -- the driest on Earth -- blooming in winter for 1st time in a decade
By María de los Ángeles Orfila published 2 days ago
"This very arid soil houses a treasure," ecologist María Fernanda Pérez told Live Science after the Atacama Desert produced a rare winter bloom.
Three panels showing different desert flower blooms with dew drops on the petals
Flowers popped up in the driest place on Earth earlier this month thanks to a strong El Niño, which increases precipitation in Chile. (Image credit: César Esteban Pizarro Gacitúa)
For the first time in a decade, plants in the Atacama Desert have started flowering in the middle of winter, covering a portion of the driest desert on the planet in white and violet hues.
The rare bloom is the result of rain in northern Chile during the Southern Hemisphere's fall. About 0.4 inches (11 millimeters) fell in mid-April, which combined with the morning fog known locally as "camanchaca" to activate vegetation that can remain dormant for up to 15 years.
Two of the first species to color the landscape this year were the "pata de guanaco" (Cistanthe grandiflora), with its bright fuchsia-colored flowers, and the white "sighs of the field" (Nolana baccata).
The flowering has occurred in an area covering between 115 and 155 square miles (300 to 400 square kilometers), said César Pizarro, head of the Biodiversity Conservation section and Scientific Research at the National Forestry Corporation (Conaf) in Atacama. A full flowering desert, which occurs in spring (September to October) due to winter rains, can extend over about 5,800 square miles (15,000 square km), with more than 200 species in bloom.
More:
https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/plants/see-stunning-photos-of-the-atacama-desert-the-driest-on-earth-blooming-in-winter-for-1st-time-in-a-decade
FirstLight
(14,090 posts)So glad El nino did some good 😊
PikaBlue
(262 posts)The next to last photo is absolutely stunning! Thank you for sharing.
captain queeg
(11,780 posts)saw anything naturally growing. I was there for a couple weeks when I saw a fly. It registered because it was the first living thing Id seen other than coworkers.
Bernardo de La Paz
(50,917 posts)HeartsCanHope
(736 posts)Years ago my son, and I accompanied my husband on a business trip to Lancaster, CA. We drove out into the Mojave Desert after an unexpected rainfall to view the poppies and other wildflowers that bloomed at the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve. It was glorious! Thank you for bringing to mind such a good memory.