These enchanting flowers are designed to attract nocturnal pollinators like fruit bats and hawk moths, not people. But if we are lucky, we get a brief chance to enjoy them before they drop.
This summer, my husband and I made frequent early morning treks down the L’Esperance trail on St. John to look for flowers on the island’s only mature baobab tree (Adansonia digitata). (There are some other smaller ones that people have planted, but they are still too young and small to flower.)
It was a 45 minute hike each way through the woods to the ruins of the old Seiben estate, but well worth the effort. Several times friends came along to share the experience.
We were delighted to see a flower in bloom the first time we went, plus numerous unopened buds that looked like tennis balls hanging from the tree. We kept going back to check on their progress.
One time we went in the late afternoon and waited to see if we could catch any of the buds starting to open. Unfortunately, nothing happened by the time the sky started to get dark, and it was a long hike back. My husband suggested spending the night and using our flashlights to keep watch on the tree, but I wasn’t game enough for that.
I read that only one of a baobab tree’s flowers opens at a time. However, once I saw two that both looked like fresh blooms, and my friend Mandy in St. Croix said she saw more than one at a time on the tree by the entrance to the St. George Village Botanical Garden.
But we did observe that the flowers don’t all bloom at once. This strategy could be because a hungry bat would have to visit more than one tree to get its fill of nectar, and so would be more likely to spread pollen from one tree to another. Cross-pollination generally promotes genetic diversity, and therefore better survival of the species.
The flowers on St. John’s baobab cannot get cross-pollinated from flowers on another nearby tree, and are not known to produce any fruit. Its flowers do have both male and female parts, but do not seem able to self-pollinate successfully,
We didn’t see any bats or moths visiting the flowers in the early morning, but there were other types of potential pollinators attracted to the flowers’ nectar, including honey bees, carpenter bees, and hummingbirds.
Although the St. John tree does not bear fruit, the ones on St. Croix do. A few years ago I visited the famous Grove Place baobab tree and brought back some of the furry fruits. That tree is enormous. It has been estimated to be about 250 to 300 years old.
Robert Nichols, in his book Remarkable Big Trees of the US Virgin Islands, reported that the Grove Place baobab tree was 53 feet high, with a trunk 53 feet around.
Although some baobab trees are native only to Madagascar (an island 250 miles east of Africa), the type found in the Caribbean comes from the African continent. Baobab seeds were reportedly brought to the Caribbean in the 1700s on the slave ships.
In the African savanna, the long-lived baobab is known as the ‘Tree of Life’ because the spongy wood inside its trunk is able to store (and provide) water, while the tree’s fruit, seeds and leaves feed people and wildlife during dry seasons.