Scientists from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew have named a tree that is new to science after actor Leonardo DiCaprio.
A new tree species has been named after actor Leonardo
DiCaprio as a tribute to the Hollywood star’s anti-logging campaigning,
London’s Royal Botanic Gardens announced Thursday.
The evergreen with large yellowish-green flowers, which was
found in Cameroon’s Ebo forest, was the first new species to be officially
named in 2022 by botanists from the renowned gardens in the London borough of
Kew.
The tree’s scientific name — Uvariopsis dicaprio —
recognises the 47-year-old US actor’s work to prevent logging in the endangered
forest, where the only known specimen of the tree was found growing.
The Hollywood A-lister campaigned on social media after
Cameroon granted permission for logging in the pristine wildlife reserve in
2020.
The concession was cancelled months later by Cameroon’s
President Paul Biya, “surely partly due to his support”, the scientists wrote
in PeerJ online journal, referring to DiCaprio.
“We very much appreciated the support Leo gave us in
campaigning to protect Ebo last year so it seemed fitting to honour him in this
way,” said Martin Cheek, who leads the Africa team in Kew’s identification and
naming department.
“Had the logging concession gone ahead, we would have likely
lost this species to timber extraction and slash and burn agriculture that
usually follows logging concessions,” Cheek added.
The Uvariopsis dicaprio has been provisionally listed as
critically endangered.
The sole known specimen, which measures four metres (13
feet) high and has only male flowers, was discovered next to a footpath, the
scientists said.
DiCaprio, best known for the 1997 film “Titanic”, currently
stars as an astronomer in the Netflix comedy “Don’t Look Up” about scientists
trying to draw the world’s attention to a comet heading towards Earth.
He himself has nevertheless been criticised for flying in a
private jet to pick up an environmental award in 2016.
Scientists at Kew have been naming new species of plants and
fungi for more than 150 years.
It is not unusual for species to be named after celebrities.
A Caribbean crustacean parasite is named after reggae star
Bob Marley, an Australian horse fly is named after the singer Beyonce and a frog
has been named after Prince Charles.
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