Inside ‘most alien-looking place on earth’ where most plant and animal life can’t be found anywhere else

Did you know that there are roughly 900,000 registered islands across the globe? Yet, there’s one that stands out from the rest due to its sheer uniqueness.

Enter Socotra Island, a remote and extraordinary island off the coast of Yemen—one of the world’s most perilous countries—nestled in the vast Indian Ocean more than 200 miles from the mainland.

Also referred to as the Socotra Archipelago, this group consists of four distinct semi-desert islands, spanning 250km and often described as ‘alien-like’ due to their unusual features.

As one of the most isolated islands on Earth, Socotra offers an unparalleled experience with its extremely unique landscape, something few get to witness.

The island’s uniqueness has earned it the title of a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2008, deeming it of ‘universal importance’ due to its unique biodiversity. Numerous travel entities, including Welcome to Socotra, organize excursions to this rare destination.

Home to 825 plant species, nearly a third of these are endemic, found nowhere else on Earth, and they even have fascinating names to match their unique appearances.

The island is famously known for its surreal dragon blood trees (Dracaena cinnabari), which seem as if they were pulled from a digital artist’s imagination.

However, these iconic trees are facing threats due to climate change. Dr. Alan Forrest explains that rising temperatures are drying out the land, while the island experiences a decrease in monsoon mists and fogs, which are vital for the trees’ moisture.

Additionally, the overpopulation of goats on the island poses a risk as they consume the young seedlings, hindering the growth of new dragon blood trees.

The island also boasts its bottle trees, which seem as though they could be a scene right from a Harry Potter movie, reminiscent of the screaming mandrake plants.

It’s not only the flora that’s unique; Socotra also has exclusive wildlife, with 90 percent of its reptile species and 95 percent of its land snail species found nowhere else on the planet, as confirmed by UNESCO.

The island is believed to have formed some 15 to 20 million years ago when Arabia separated from the African continental plate, thus creating the Gulf of Aden and leaving Socotra on Africa’s plate.

This isolation is likely the reason behind its highly unique biodiversity, as the island has not been influenced by external factors like those that impact more accessible islands and nations.

Some speculate that Socotra could be the location of the biblical Garden of Eden, often mentioned in various religious texts, though this theory remains unconfirmed.

Whether or not it’s the real Garden of Eden, Socotra is undeniably a marvel worth admiring.