Hi Friends,
Dears removing bark, Elephants knocking down trees in the forest have
been happening since the centuries. It can not be termed a menace.
As long as man does not interfere in nature, nature will take care of
it. It can not be compared to the decimation of thousands of acres
that man has committed. It can not be compared with the damage that
the forest department has committed by introducing thousands of acres
of teak plantation. The animals have been deprived of their natural
food. It has forced the macaques from leaving the forests and seeking
food in plantations and orchards.
The girdling done by settlers near forests is many times more than the
girdling done by deers. Politicians open up plots for settlers who are
given 3 to 5 cents of land near forests commit much greater harm than
the poor deers. These settlers forage for firewood in the forests and
when there are no dry twigs or branches girdle small trees and when
they dry up cut them down for firewood.
No my friends, deers do not do a fraction of the damage done to nature by man.

Regards
Yazdy.
On Sat, May 23, 2009 at 7:37 PM, raghu ananth <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> We saw this tree - guggala dhoopa - Boswellia serrata Var.glabra
> (BURSERACEAE) with its bark removed/eaten(?) up. Locals over here say the
> the sambar deer (Cervus unicolor) with its long horn  rubs the bark of this
> tree and eventually removes it (ring barking or girdlin) completly.  The
> tree with its bark stripped would die soon. We saw two such trees without
> its bark.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringbarking
> The bark of this tree is considered to be sweet, cooling and tonic.
>
> Local Name (Kannada) : guggala dhoopa
> Hindi Salai
> Scientific Boswellia serrata Var.glabra (BURSERACEAE).
> Bolpe reseved forest, Kukke,  Western ghats
> Photo date: 25 Mar 2009
>
> References:-
> From wikipedia
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringbarking
> the process of completely removing a strip of bark (consisting of Secondary
> Phloem tissue, cork cambium, and cork) around a tree's outer circumference,
> causing its death.
> Girdling occurs by deliberate human action (forestry and vandalism),
> accidentally (as in the case of new saplings tethered to a supporting
> stake), or by the feeding actions of
> some herbivores (who feed on bark at their height). It is most commonly used
> as a deliberate method of thinning forests and by farmers to yield larger
> fruits.
>
> http://www.liveindia..com/herbs/7.html
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boswellia_serrata
> http://envis.frlht.org/trade_search.php?txtpart=RESIN&lst_part=RESIN&txttrade=&lst_trade=KUNTHIRIKKAM
>
> ________________________________
> Explore and discover exciting holidays and getaways with Yahoo! India Travel
> Click here! >
>

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