Also, "Silk Cotton Tree" is the common name for Chorisia/Ceiba  
speciosa, the pink-flowered green-trunked thorny ornamental cousin of  
Bombax ceiba and Ceiba pentandra. It produces kapok, but of a lower  
quality than that of C. pentandra.

-bs


On Aug 29, 2008, at 11:21 AM, Padmanabhan Geetha wrote:

> Can some one tell me  about this phenomena regarding  Silk cotton  
> tree? Hearing this for the first time.Forwarding this mail that  
> came to me.
> geetha
>
>
> TN forest Dept forced to fell 'polluting' trees
> Thursday, 28 August, 2008 10:33 PM
> From:
> "G Narayanan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Add sender to Contacts
> To:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> -----Inline Attachment Follows-----
>
> Hi Folks - Please read this report and enlighten me? As far as I can
> remember, Silk cotton trees (Bombax ceiba) are a native species, and
> their flowers are an important food source for several species.
> Perhaps the reporter has erred in identifying the species, or has
> quoted "out of context". Perhaps someone knowledgeable about forest
> ecology can confirm if the "facts" stated in the report are indeed
> correct. I hesitate to ask - do we know anything about the ecology of
> this species and whether any scientific assessment of the claims in
> the report have been carried out?
>
> Thanks
>
> GN
>
>
>
> http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/holnus/004200808281221.htm
>
> Theni (TN) (PTI): At a time when the focus is on afforestation, the
> Tamil Nadu Forest Department is facing a strange situation -- large
> scale felling of cotton silk trees in reserve forest areas in the
> district as these trees were found be be causing extensive damage to
> the ecology.
>
> About 10,000 trees raised by settlers in Varushanadu, Vellimalai and
> Megamalai hilly reserve forests have already been cut to protect the
> flora and fauna, official sources told PTI here.
>
> They said the silk cotton trees, though providing a livelihood to the
> settlers, harmed the growth of herbal plants native to the hills and
> also turned out to be a parasite nourishing on the moisture and
> nutrition of the wild trees in the forest.
>
> A silk cotton tree would suck water from four square metre range.
> Besides, when the pod of the tree bursts, it causes pollution and
> affects the health of birds and wild animals.
>
> The department realised that if the rare trees, native to the hills
> perished, there would be a chain reaction affecting the fauna also.
>
> Birds, squirrels and other species of animals would not get their
> food. The trees consumed a lot of ground water and would not allow
> other plants in the neighbourhood to blossom and grow, said an
> official.
> For more read.... http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/holnus/ 
> 004200808281221.htm
>
>
>
>
> >


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