
Finding magnolias on mule-back
by Ernesto Testé
Finding new magnolias in the mountains of Eastern Cuba and contributing to their conservation is the goal of one of Planta!’s teams. This time, they are traveling to one of Cuba’s most isolated sites.
In the past, the jíjira (Leptocereus wrightii) was common in Cojímar and El Vedado in Havana. Then it was thought Extinct, displaced by livestock and urbanization. Today is the only Cuban cactus that could truly claim the name “El Habanero”.
Date: 19/07/2019
Project: Conservation of threatened species from arid zones of Cuba.
The most threatened species of Cuban cacti. Feared by the farmers of yesteryear because their thorns were hurting the cattle… When we started this project in 2016, it seemed that there were only 2 jíjiras (Leptocereus wrightii) left in Cuba. But they lived here before those animals and those farmers; and its thorny presence did not claim any primacy when urbanization and industries arrived.
At the beginning of the 20th century the jíjira or pitahaya could be found between Havana and Marianao beach, even in the neighborhood of El Vedado. In 1940, it was only reported in the coastal vegetation of Cojímar (toward the east of the capital), and in the mid-1980s it was considered Extinct.
Head of the arid zones project – Planta!
Researcher, National Botanical Garden, University of Havana

by Ernesto Testé
Finding new magnolias in the mountains of Eastern Cuba and contributing to their conservation is the goal of one of Planta!’s teams. This time, they are traveling to one of Cuba’s most isolated sites.

by Michel Faife
Planta!’s volunteers stablish a new subpopulation of Rhodogeron coronopifolius, a rare Central Cuba species that grows between the rocks. Leaded by Faife and carrying a drill, punches and chisels, they open their way through the rock.

by Majela Hernández Rodríguez
The magnolia conservation project that started in Topes de Collantes ten years ago is aiming to protect other magnolia species in the mountains of Eastern Cuba.