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From: <[email protected]>
Date: 13 April 2013 10:29
Subject:  Mapping Chennai’s canopy
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Mapping Chennai's canopy
HEMA VIJAY

A new survey of tree hotspots and rare trees could help policy-makers
develop the city along green lines, finds HEMA VIJAY

T.T.K. Road, once an avenue of banyan trees, today has none. In Thiru-Vi-Ka
Park, seven huge Trincomalee Wood trees and a large Barringtonia tree got
the axe for the Metro Rail project. In St George's Cathedral, a large and
very rare Button tree was cut to make way for an exhibit centre.

We plant trees randomly but worse, we cut trees randomly, with not a
thought for maintaining urban green spaces, or preserving tree species. As
a result, much of Chennai's tree wealth has been wiped out, with rare and
irreplaceable trees routinely cut to make way for roads, houses or
bus-stops.

A lot of this happens because botanists are not consulted before trees are
cut. "Some trees can be transplanted; others can be preserved by designing
infrastructure or routes around them," says Dr. R. Pauline Deborah,
professor of plant biology at Women's Christian College. The average person
is not even aware of which tree is rare or really old.

Now, that could change. Over the last four years, Deborah has trudged
through the city to collect images and data on Chennai's trees for her
thesis on `Tree Diversity in Urban Landscaping with Special Reference to
Chennai'. The massive and comprehensive databank can now be used by
policy-makers to preserve the city's irreplaceable tree wealth and develop
Chennai along sustainable lines.

"A map on tree cover can be used to guide planned development in the city,
be it residential, commercial, educational or governmental. The Indian
Constitution already stipulates this but there is no compliance," says Dr.
Abdul Razak, Professor and HoD at the School of Architecture and Planning,
Anna University.

Deborah's research includes Chennai's tree diversity and how it has changed
across the years, rare trees and their locations, heritage trees and their
locations, tree hotspots, spatial distribution maps of trees, ratio of
exotic species vs. native species, and much more. For instance, she found
that the ratio of exotic to native trees in Chennai is 70:30, an
ecologically disastrous scenario. "Exotics are suitable for a few home
gardens, parks, institutions or botanical gardens. They are highly unfit
for planting as avenue trees since they can easily topple during monsoons
and cause fatal accidents and property damage. Moreover, exotic species can
alter the water table or soil pH. Some of them can even turn invasive like
the Mesquite, Muntingia and Custard Apple, posing a threat to native
vegetation," says the professor.

Architecture students are routinely asked to map trees, water bodies and
other natural features of a site and come up with building designs that
preserve these. During professional practice, though, this aspect is often
overlooked. "To ensure compliance, it must be legalised, with the local
government monitoring the construction," says Razak.

At the very least, it requires widespread awareness creation, which is
where tree data becomes invaluable. "User friendly, web-based, open-source
collaborative technology that improves information sharing, communicates
the value of urban forests, and engages communities in creating greener
urban environments is an imperative need," says Shobha Menon, founder
trustee, Nizhal, which has mapped trees in areas such as Valmiki Nagar and
Gandhi Nagar.

Deborah's research finds that 54 tree species in Chennai are restricted to
just 3 per cent of the city, and she warns, "This includes some very rare
trees that exist as single trees or in small populations of less than a
dozen, and they are at risk of being totally wiped out from the city if
cut. For example, Gustavia Augusta Trees or Tree Lotus have beautiful
flowers resembling a small lotus and are found only inside the Theosophical
Society. There are only 34 heritage trees like the Baobab left in Madras
Medical College. Each has a girth of about 10 m and is more than 150 years
old; they need protection."

Rare tree hotspots in Chennai include the Theosophical Society,
Agri-Horticultural Society, Guindy Reserve Forest, IIT, Raj Bhavan, Women's
Christian College, Madras Christian College, Nageswara Rao Park, Anna
University, YMCA Nandanam, Pachiappa's College and Presidency College.

The pity is that, thus far, tree mapping and city planning have remained
largely isolated from one another. Perhaps the new databank could change
this.

54 tree species are restricted to just 3 per cent of the city.

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-propertyplus/mapping-chennais-canopy/article4612629.ece


__,_._,___




-- 
With regards,
J.M.Garg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jmgarg1
'Creating awareness of Indian Flora & Fauna'
The whole world uses my Image Resource of more than a *thousand species* &
eight thousand images of Birds, Butterflies, Plants etc. (arranged
alphabetically & place-wise):
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:J.M.Garg. You can also use them
for free as per Creative Commons license attached with each image.
For identification, learning, discussion & documentation of Indian Flora,
please visit/ join our Efloraofindia Google e-group (largest in the world):
http://groups.google.co.in/group/indiantreepix (more than 2085 members &
1,50,000 messages on 31/3/13) or Efloraofindia website:
https://sites.google.com/site/efloraofindia/ (with a species database
of more than 8000 species).
Also author of 'A Photoguide to the Birds of Kolkata & Common Birds of
India'.

-- 

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