UAE | Environment

How green is my desert

Trekking through the wadis or hillsides will take you far off the beaten track to spot bright yellow, white or red petals - the UAE's often difficult-to-spot wildflowers.

  • By Emmanuelle Landais, Staff Reporter
  • Published: 00:00 January 27, 2007
  • Gulf News

  • Image Credit: Megan Hirons and Tracy Brand/Gulf News
  • Heliotropium kyotschyi (Turnsole) - on the Dibba coast beside the Ruus Al Jibal Mountains between Dibba and Ras Al Khaimah.
Image 1 of 24
123456789101112131415161718192021222324

Dubai: Building developments are encroaching on wildlife in the UAE causing indigenous species to disappear.

Trekking through the wadis or hillsides will take you far off the beaten track to spot bright yellow, white or red petals. Prepare to don your walking boots and leave the car parked on the tarmac.

Walking up a small peak on rocky scrubland can bring you to an unforeseen patch of wild purple flowers and grasses. The hillsides have a green hue when seen from below, giving the usually barren landscape a spring-time feel.

Dr Reza Khan, director of Dubai Zoo and a keen botanist, knows all the nooks and crannies where the UAE's plants sprout after the rain.

Author of The Indigenous Trees of the United Arab Emirates guide for Dubai Municipality, Khan said wildflowers of the UAE are unknown to many people as they can be difficult to spot.

"Wild flowers have nowhere to grow anymore because their habitat is being taken up by the construction of roads or buildings. As soon as it rains some plants come to life, but with nowhere for them to grow it doesn't matter if it rains or not. Some can flower after 5 years," said Khan.

However Maerusa crassifolia is a shrub that is extremely rare nowadays.

"You used to find it a lot in the mountains, at the foothills of Hatta and Buraimi. They have disappeared because of overgrazing. Camels and goats just love it," said Khan.

"Wadi systems need to be protected. During the rainy season they can be like torrents and they are the natural irrigation systems of nature," said Khan.

Other plants have been used for centuries by bedouin men and women either as cures, painkillers or cosmetics and food.

For example the Fire bush (Calligonum comosum), known in Arabic as 'abal bush' is important as it stabilises sand. It has bright red, prickly lantern-shaped fruit which the bedouins used as a spice and the young shoots as a vegetable.

Many bedouin girls have rouged their cheeks with the bright red fruit. Also the burnt woody parts of the Eyelash plant (Blepharis ciliaris) locally known as 'kahil' or 'kohl', used to be mixed to make a black powder and applied to the eyes, both as a cosmetic or to soothe eye infections.

Wanderers in the desert might also come across the desert squash (citrullus colocynthis) called Hanzal in Arabic. It has a yellow bitter fruit unfit for human consumption.

Have your say
Have you seen many flowers after rain in the desert? Did you seek to find out more about desert flora? Would you like to go on guided desert tours designed by naturalists? Send in your comments below or your pictues of the green UAE desertscape to feedback@gulfnews.com



Your comments


I admire the greenery in the desert while travelling to and from my office. Frequent articles in newspapers and environmental clips on UAE national television in Arabic and English will make the general public aware of the environment.
Mohamed
Abu Dhabi,UAE

We would love to go on guided tours, The little white flower is everywhere to be seen - on the way to Oman via Hatta and flying over to Big Red in a hot air balloon. The green hue is so exciting to see due to the rain we had. The life on the ground is beautiful
Zelda
Dubai,UAE

I have been born and brought up in Dubai, and I couldn't believe my eyes when I recently visited Ras Al Khaimah for a day out. I saw grass growing on the desert around both sides of the highway. It was something amazing. I saw flowers and trees -it was a great view. But it also shows the effect of global warming and how it?s taking its toll on nature. Save the environment, save energy, save water, save fuel everyone. Let's make the world a better place to live for all.
Kamlesh
Dubai,U.A.E

To have guided tours to the right places with naturalists would be a great option to learn more about the UAE.
R. Seltz
Abu Dhabi,UAE

Gulf News
Mooch

Mooch ado about nothing

Mooch represents dreams, troubles of a Dubaiite

National Day wallpaper

40 years of UAE

Download commemorative wallpapers of the UAE

<i>Building a Nation</i> is both accessible enough for newcomers in the UAE to appreciate the emirates and informed enough for long-term residents to value the history and context.

Book

Gulf News' book chronicles UAE's rich history

Community Reports

More from Community Reports

A day to remember two different lives

History

Gulf News Editor-in-Chief recalls the UAE of old

UAE Journey

Video

GNTV takes us on a journey across the emirates