Enset, Ethiopia’s remarkable ‘tree against hunger’ flowers at Kew Gardens for the very first time – see it before it dies

Release date: 13 April 2023

  • Specimen of Ensete ventricosum is the first of its kind to flower in Kew’s Temperate House
  • Banana relative supports the food security of 20 million people in Ethiopia
  • Incredible inflorescence could reach up to two metres in length, with banana-like fruit
  • Once flowering period ends, plant will wither and die

Enset (Ensete ventricosum), an African relative of the much-beloved banana plant, is flowering inside of Kew Gardens’ Temperate House, marking the very first time this extraordinary plant has produced an inflorescence at the botanic garden.

Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew scientists and horticulturists are now encouraging visitors to hurry up and see the plant in bloom, as due to its monocarpic nature, the plant will flower only once and die.

Known by some as the Ethiopian banana, the Abyssinian banana, or even the false banana, RBG Kew scientists and partners refer to enset as the ‘tree against hunger’. Thanks to its remarkable versatility, drought resistance, and disease tolerance, enset is a staple source of nutrition for more than 20 million people in Ethiopia.

Reaching up to ten metres in height, as few as 15 enset plants can feed a person for an entire year, often propping up diets during periods of drought or when other crops fail. In fact, a recent study published by RBG Kew scientists and partners, has identified enset as a ‘climate-coping strategy’ in Ethiopia’s drought-prone regions. According to the research, Ethiopian smallholder farmers choose to plant more enset directly in response to drought.

Research at RBG Kew has also uncovered the spectacular genetic diversity of enset with the potential to strengthen food security and feed millions more people across the region.

However, despite its hunger-tackling properties, you would not want to eat the plant’s impressive, banana-like fruit. They are filled with large, black seeds that make them virtually inedible. Instead, farmers consume the plant’s giant pseudostem and underground corm, scraping these parts into a starchy pulp that is fermented in a pit for up to 12 months, before being processed into a bread-like food called kocho.

Dr James Borrell, Research Leader in Trait Diversity and Function at Kew, says: 'Not many people have heard of enset out of Ethiopia and that’s a shame because this truly remarkable plant is a vital source of nutrition for millions of subsistence farmers across the region. Enset has a unique set of characteristics that set it apart from other familiar crops; most importantly it’s a perennial and be planted and harvested at any time. As a result, farmers can treat enset as a ‘green asset’ to buffer against food shortages when other crops fail or are otherwise unavailable, much like a bank account for food. It is no surprise then that Ethiopians frequently refer to enset as the ‘tree against hunger''. 

The flowering enset is one of two E. ventricosum specimens that arrived at Kew’s nurseries in 2019, measuring just 30cm tall. Prior to their planting in the iconic Temperate House, Kew’s horticulturists nurtured the related species E. superbum, which flowered inside the conservatory in 1991. Previously, Kew’s living collections also housed the species E. lecongetti and E. livingstonianum, the latter of which is native from West Tropical Africa to Malawi.

Kew’s horticulturists introduced the enset into the South Octagon of the Temperate House in 2020 once it hit a height of 1.5 metres. However, just a year later, the plant was big enough to be moved into a permanent display in the south beds where it has remained since. Today, both enset plants dominate their immediate surrounding with a large canopy of leaves towering over the visitors’ head.

As with all monocarpic plants, the enset will die once the flowering period is over. However, a healthy specimen will be selected as its replacement to keep the display going.

David Cooke, Temperate House Supervisor, says: 'The enset arrived at Kew in 2019, measuring no more than 30 centimetres in height – pretty much a baby compared to the impressive plant we see in the Temperate House today. Kew’s horticulturists took care of it in the lower nurseries before it was mature enough to find a permanent home inside of the Temperate House. Seeing the enset in flower now is a sombre reminder that its time with us is coming to an end but also a testament to the wonderful work our horticulturists and scientists carry out to learn more about the natural world and to protect this planet’s biodiversity.'

ENDS

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About Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew 

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew is a world-famous scientific organisation, internationally respected for its outstanding collections as well as its scientific expertise in plant diversity, conservation and sustainable development in the UK and around the world. Kew Gardens is a major international and a top London visitor attraction. Kew Gardens’ 132 hectares of landscaped gardens, and Wakehurst, Kew’s Wild Botanic Garden, attract over 2.5 million visits every year. Kew Gardens was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site in July 2003 and celebrated its 260th anniversary in 2019. Wakehurst is home to Kew's Millennium Seed Bank, the largest wild plant seed bank in the world. RBG Kew receives approximately one third of its funding from Government through the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and research councils. Further funding needed to support RBG Kew’s vital work comes from donors, membership and commercial activity including ticket sales. In the first six months since implementing a new accessibility scheme for those in receipt of Universal Credit, Pension Credit and Legacy Benefits, Kew has welcomed over 20,000 visitors with £1 tickets.  

About Kew Science

Kew Science is the driving force behind RBG Kew’s mission to understand and protect plants and fungi, for the well-being of people and the future of all life on Earth. Over 300 Kew scientists work with partners in more than 100 countries worldwide to halt biodiversity loss, uncover secrets of the natural world, and to conserve and restore the extraordinary diversity of plants and fungi. Kew’s Science Strategy 2021–2025 lays out five scientific priorities to aid these goals: research into the protection of biodiversity through Ecosystem Stewardship, understanding the variety and evolution of traits in plants and fungi through Trait Diversity and Function; digitising and sharing tools to analyse Kew’s scientific collections through Digital Revolution; using new technologies to speed up the naming and characterisation of plants through Accelerated Taxonomy; and cultivating new scientific and commercial partnerships in the UK and globally through Enhanced Partnerships. One of Kew’s greatest international collaborations is the Millennium Seed Bank Partnership, which has to date stored more than 2.4 billion seeds of over 40,000 wild species of plants across the globe. In 2020, Kew scientists estimated in the State of the World’s Plants and Fungi report that 2 in 5 plants globally are threatened with extinction.