
Sunday, March 29, 2026· 10.4399, -75.2574
Green Fruits in the Sanctuary Understory
By Michel Salas
Amid the dense vegetation and the bamboo rising in the background, Michel Salas and Jorge Alcalá paused before an unassuming yet striking shrub: small, round green fruits clustered tightly together, catching the afternoon light as it filtered through the canopy. The dry, earthy ground beneath their feet, the clear blue sky above the treetops — everything pointed to an unrelenting day in the field, the kind where a trained eye finds what others simply walk past.
The plant belongs to the genus Solanum, family Solanaceae — a distant relative of the tomato and the potato, though here in this tropical forest near Cartagena it carries its own story. Some leaves showed yellowing at the edges, a possible sign of stress, while others shone with a deep, vigorous green. For now, the record stands at genus level; the exact species remains to be confirmed.
This is how knowledge of a place is built: one shrub at a time, a set of coordinates, two names, and the patience to return when there is more certainty.


