Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia (2024)

In 1997, ecologists Daniel Janzen and Winnie Hallwachs approached an orange juice company in Costa Rica with an off-the-wall idea.

In exchange for donating a portion of unspoiled, forested land to the Área de Conservación Guanacaste — a nature preserve in the country's northwest — the park would allow the company to dump its discarded orange peels and pulp, free of charge, in a heavily grazed, largely deforested area nearby.

One year later, one thousand trucks poured into the national park, offloading over 12,000 metric tons of sticky, mealy, orange compost onto the worn-out plot.

The site was left untouched and largely unexamined for over a decade. A sign was placed to ensure future researchers could locate and study it.

16 years later, Janzen dispatched graduate student Timothy Treuer to look for the site where the food waste was dumped.

Treuer initially set out to locate the large placard that marked the plot — and failed.

Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia (1)

The first deposit of orange peels in 1996.

Photo by Dan Janzen.

"It's a huge sign, bright yellow lettering. We should have been able to see it," Treuer says. After wandering around for half an hour with no luck, he consulted Janzen, who gave him more detailed instructions on how to find the plot.

When he returned a week later and confirmed he was in the right place, Treuer was floored. Compared to the adjacent barren former pastureland, the site of the food waste deposit was "like night and day."

Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia (2)

The site of the orange peel deposit (L) and adjacent pastureland (R).

Photo by Leland Werden.

"It was just hard to believe that the only difference between the two areas was a bunch of orange peels. They look like completely different ecosystems," he explains.

The area was so thick with vegetation he still could not find the sign.

Treuer and a team of researchers from Princeton University studied the site over the course of the following three years.

The results, published in the journal "Restoration Ecology," highlight just how completely the discarded fruit parts assisted the area's turnaround.

The ecologists measured various qualities of the site against an area of former pastureland immediately across the access road used to dump the orange peels two decades prior. Compared to the adjacent plot, which was dominated by a single species of tree, the site of the orange peel deposit featured two dozen species of vegetation, most thriving.

Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia (3)

Lab technician Erik Schilling explores the newly overgrown orange peel plot.

Photo by Tim Treuer.

In addition to greater biodiversity, richer soil, and a better-developed canopy, researchers discovered a tayra (a dog-sized weasel) and a giant fig tree three feet in diameter, on the plot.

"You could have had 20 people climbing in that tree at once and it would have supported the weight no problem," says Jon Choi, co-author of the paper, who conducted much of the soil analysis. "That thing was massive."

Recent evidence suggests that secondary tropical forests — those that grow after the original inhabitants are torn down — are essential to helping slow climate change.

In a 2016 study published in Nature, researchers found that such forests absorb and store atmospheric carbon at roughly 11 times the rate of old-growth forests.

Treuer believes better management of discarded produce — like orange peels — could be key to helping these forests regrow.

In many parts of the world, rates of deforestation are increasing dramatically, sapping local soil of much-needed nutrients and, with them, the ability of ecosystems to restore themselves.

Meanwhile, much of the world is awash in nutrient-rich food waste. In the United States, up to half of all produce in the United States is discarded. Most currently ends up in landfills.

Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia (4)

The site after a deposit of orange peels in 1998.

Photo by Dan Janzen.

"We don't want companies to go out there will-nilly just dumping their waste all over the place, but if it's scientifically driven and restorationists are involved in addition to companies, this is something I think has really high potential," Treuer says.

The next step, he believes, is to examine whether other ecosystems — dry forests, cloud forests, tropical savannas — react the same way to similar deposits.

Two years after his initial survey, Treuer returned to once again try to locate the sign marking the site.

Since his first scouting mission in 2013, Treuer had visited the plot more than 15 times. Choi had visited more than 50. Neither had spotted the original sign.

In 2015, when Treuer, with the help of the paper's senior author, David Wilcove, and Princeton Professor Rob Pringle, finally found it under a thicket of vines, the scope of the area's transformation became truly clear.

Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia (5)

The sign after clearing away the vines.

Photo by Tim Treuer.

"It's a big honking sign," Choi emphasizes.

19 years of waiting with crossed fingers had buried it, thanks to two scientists, a flash of inspiration, and the rind of an unassuming fruit.

This article originally appeared on 08.23.17

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Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia (2024)

FAQs

Why this 'imaginary' line separates Asian animals from the species you find in Australia? ›

Deep water prevented the islands on the east side of the boundary from ever being connected to Asia, so the species that live there remain distinct from those on the other island.

What is the line between Australia and Asia? ›

The Wallace line or Wallace's line is a faunal boundary line drawn in 1859 by the British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace and named by the English biologist T.H. Huxley that separates the biogeographical realms of Asia and 'Wallacea', a transitional zone between Asia and Australia also called the Malay Archipelago and ...

Why is there a Wallace Line to separate fauna from Southeast Asia vs Australia? ›

A biogeographical boundary

The Wallace Line, separating the Sunda Shelf (Borneo, Bali, Java, Sumatra) from the Sahul Shelf (Australia, New Guinea), was formed during the Pleistocene when lower sea levels exposed land connections between some islands but not between Asia and Australia.

What is the line that separates Asian from Australian plant and animal species in Indonesia? ›

The Wallace and Weber lines are imaginary dividers used to mark the difference between species found in Australia and Papua New Guinea and Southeast Asia. This is especially apparent when considering the difference in mammals between the two regions.

Which line separates Oriental and Australian region? ›

Wallace Line, boundary between the Oriental and Australian faunal regions, proposed by the 19th-century British naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace.

What separates Asia from Australia? ›

Pacific ocean lies between Australia and Asia. The Pacific ocean, being the largest and deepest ocean on the earth, extends from the Arctic ocean on the north to Southern ocean towards south and Asia & Australia makes its western boundaries and North & South America bounds it towards east.

What line divides Australia? ›

A narrow strait, deep and fast flowing, the Wallace Line runs between the Indonesian islands of Bali and Lombok. Named for the naturalist who first identified it, the Wallace Line separates the wild worlds of Australia and Asia. On one side of the line, tigers stalk monkeys, and elephants shape the course of rivers.

What is the reason for the Wallace Line? ›

Cause. The root cause of Wallace's line is that the ancient supercontinent Gondwana was separated entirely from other parts of the world after Pangaea broke up. Australasia and its smaller islands were part of Gondwana, and that is why their fauna is so different from that of south-east Asia.

Why do animals not cross the Wallace Line? ›

From watching a David Attenborough documentary many years ago (around 2000 to 2010), I recall that one of the issues behind the Wallace Line is the strength of ocean currents between islands and the roughness of the water prevents animals from crossing the line and establishing themselves on the other side of the line.

What is the Wallace's line short definition? ›

Wal·​lace's line ˈwä-lə-səz- : a hypothetical boundary that separates the highly distinctive faunas of the Asian and Australian biogeographic regions and passes between the islands of Bali and Lombok in Indonesia, between Borneo and Sulawesi, and between the Philippines and the Moluccas.

Which imaginary line crosses the Australia continent? ›

The Tropic of Capricorn is an imaginary line that represents the southernmost position of the sun on its annual journey, where it can be directly overhead. The line passes through Queensland, the Northern Territory and Western Australia.

Why are Australian plants and animals so different from those found in other parts of the world? ›

By 30 million years ago Australia had fully separated and journeyed north on its own. Since then, changes in land formation and climate, and the physical separation from the rest of the world, led to the unique flora and fauna that we know in Australia today.

Which ocean separates the continents of Asia and Australia? ›

The Pacific Ocean is a body of salt water extending from the Antarctic region in the south to the Arctic in the north and lying between the continents of Asia and Australia on the west and North America and South America on the east.

What is the line between Asia and Australia? ›

The Wallace Line refers to an imaginary frontier, which effectively separates the faunal regions of Asia and Australia. To the west of the line, you'll find species including elephants, tigers, rhinos, and orangutans, but on the eastern side, these are nowhere to be seen.

What separates Australia? ›

The continent includes a continental shelf overlain by shallow seas which divide it into several landmasses—the Arafura Sea and Torres Strait between mainland Australia and New Guinea, and Bass Strait between mainland Australia and Tasmania.

What animals does the Wallace Line separate? ›

Wallace's Line separates an Asian fauna which includes primates, carnivores, elephants, and ungulates from the marsupial fauna of Australia and New Guinea.

What is in between Asia and Australia? ›

The island of New Guinea is on the same tectonic plate as Australia and shares part of the continental shelf. Generally it is considered to be a South Pacific nation rather than Asian. The island is divided into Papua New Guinea and a province of Indonesia.

How is Asia and Australia connected? ›

Australia is part of the Asia region and our histories from ancient times to the present are linked. Australians play a significant role in social, cultural, political and economic developments in the Asia region.

Where does Asia end and Australia start? ›

The continental boundary between Asia and Australia is somewhere in the Wallacean region of the Malay Archipelago. The boundary is frequently divided along the anthropologic Melanesian Line or the biogeographic Weber's Line.

What sea separates Australia and Asia? ›

The Pacific separates Asia and Australia from the Americas. It may be further subdivided by the equator into northern (North Pacific) and southern (South Pacific) portions. It extends from the Antarctic region in the South to the Arctic in the north.

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