![Picture](/uploads/2/5/0/6/25065555/173097597.jpg?166)
The Baobab- The baobab is leafless for nine months of the year. This helps it retain its water in its thick, fire proof trunk, which is another adaptation. Its trunk is thick, and can store enough water to last for the nine dry months in the year.
![Picture](/uploads/2/5/0/6/25065555/915548963.jpg?155)
The Candelabra Tree - This tree is a highly dangerous one. The contact with the sap can blister skin, if you get any of the sap in your eye, it can blind you. The needles and bark let off fumes, and it is harmful to breath this. All of these prevent animals from feeding on it.
The Candelabra Tree - This tree is a highly dangerous one. The contact with the sap can blister skin, if you get any of the sap in your eye, it can blind you. The needles and bark let off fumes, and it is harmful to breath this. All of these prevent animals from feeding on it.
![Picture](/uploads/2/5/0/6/25065555/161274373.jpg?138)
The Jarrah Tree - The Jarrah tree has something called a lignotuber, which lets it store many carbohydrates underground, and can let it regrow after a fire. It also have really long roots, letting it go deep underground and get water, which is great in a dry place such as the savanna.
![Picture](/uploads/2/5/0/6/25065555/926150951.jpg?119)
Bermuda grass- Bermuda grass has a long system of roots, letting it reproduce underground and find water deep underground. It also survives well in poor soils and droughts, making it ideal for the dry savanna.