Seeds of 19 African tree species added to Svalbard Global Seed Vault
Seeds from 19 African tree species just made it into the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, the icy archive tucked into Norwegian permafrost that now safeguards 1.3 million seed samples from around the world. Thirteen of the newly deposited species are native to Africa, including the beloved baobab and Faidherbia albida, a quietly miraculous tree that fixes nitrogen, feeds livestock, shades crops, and offers food during the dry season. Scientists gathered the seeds alongside Indigenous groups and local seed networks, capturing genetic variations shaped by generations of stewardship. It’s a small, hopeful act of foresight: as forests face mounting pressure worldwide, preserving this living diversity — and honoring the communities who cultivated it — gives future restoration efforts a fighting chance.

