Baobab trees ... it lives on. The tree’s leaves can be cooked and eaten like spinach, the bark is used to make rope and paper, the flowers are used to make glue and its seeds are used to make ...
Local communities utilize baobab leaves, pulp, and seeds as a source ... create awareness of its benefits. "Here in Kenya, baobab is a super food. Each part of the tree is useful from the leaves ...
At Mombasa's MacKinnon market, popularly known as Marikiti, the prices of baobab seeds are on a ... government protects the trees because of the environmental benefits. A survey conducted by ...
Thousands of seeds from native African tree species and indigenous varieties of crops have been deposited in the cold, dry rock vaults of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in the permafrost of ...
But this tree is not only noted for its majestic stature. It's also an important food source for people living in West Africa. The leaves, fruits, and seeds of the African baobab tree are all edible.
Seeds from 19 species of African trees ... in the economies and ecologies of the continent. Among the trees selected were the baobab (Adansonia digitata), which people in several African countries ...
Zimbabwe has about 5 million of the trees, according to Zimtrade, a government export agency. But the baobab's health ...