Once hailed as a solution to Ethiopia's creeping desertification, a foreign tree is now spreading uncontrollably across the east African nation, threatening fragile ecosystems and the very survival of local communities.
Native to Latin America, the prosopis shrub-like tree was first planted in Ethiopia's northeastern Afar region in the 1970s.
It has become a nightmare for locals like livestock farmer Khadija Humed.
"Because of this plant, we have become poor," she told AFP.
Heat-resistant and fast-growing, prosopis initially promised to curb soil erosion and provide shade to cool the local micro-climate in Afar's arid lowlands.
But today it has overrun the region's vast plains -- its thorny, drooping branches rising up to 10 metres (33 feet) high.
Each tree can draw up to seven litre

WFVX WVII News

CBS19 News Crime
AlterNet
CBS News
NBC Sports Soccer
The List
Sarasota Herald-Tribune Sports
Bored Panda
CNBC