Forwarding pl.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Darshana M [email protected]
Date: 21 June 2014 11:45
Subject:  Well written piece on tree planting
To:



Just read this article and thought I should share it. The bigger picture
should always be taken into account. :)

For PALs, we need to concentrate on planting trees that will help the
nesting and food needs of native birds. Trees like Gulmohur, though pretty,
are of no use!

Thinking of planting a tree? Please stop.
<https://in.news.yahoo.com/thinking-of-planting-a-tree--please-stop-092359776.html>
[image: image]
<https://in.news.yahoo.com/thinking-of-planting-a-tree--please-stop-092359776.html>
Thinking of planting a tree? Please stop.
<https://in.news.yahoo.com/thinking-of-planting-a-tree--please-stop-092359776.html>
We’re doing it all wrong.
View on in.news.yahoo.com
<https://in.news.yahoo.com/thinking-of-planting-a-tree--please-stop-092359776.html>
Preview by Yahoo

Thinking of planting a tree? Please stop.We’re doing it all wrong.[image:
Grist Media]By Deepika Sarma | Grist Media – 20 hours ago

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Tree planting. Everyone does it. Schools do it. MNCs do it. Widows and
mourning relatives do it. Even Nitin Gadkari does it. Last week, the Road
Transport and Highways Minister Nitin Gadkari announced
<http://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/energy-and-environment/200-cr-trees-to-be-planted-along-highways-gadkari/article6111239.ece?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication>
that
he had plans to plant 200 crore trees along 1 lakh km of National
Highway.Indians frequently combine this anodyne pursuit with another one –
record breaking. In 2012, 9,814 volunteers planted 99,103 saplings
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/environment/flora-fauna/New-world-record-for-planting-trees-in-Leh/articleshow/17040038.cms>
of
Ladakhi willow in an hour, breaking the previous record (66,000 done on the
occasion of a tycoon’s birthday in Philippines
<http://punto.com.ph/News/Article/14858/Volume-6-No-20/Headlines/Investments-for-future-generations-66-000-trees-on-MVP%C2%92s-66th-birthday>,
in
case you wondered). We also hold the Guinness Book record for the most
number of trees planted in a day by a team
<http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/records-1/most-trees-planted-in-24-hours-(team)/>,
but
Pakistan has the one for the most number of trees planted by an individual
in a day
<http://www.treehugger.com/culture/pakistani-soldier-plants-20101-trees-in-one-day-sets-new-world-record.html>.
Noble
intentions and tree planting always seem to go together.
Sadly, you might want to stop doing it. Experts will tell you that if you
really do love the environment, you should take a step back before you
lower that next sapling into the ground. TheNational Forest Policy
<http://envfor.nic.in/sites/default/files/introduction-nfp.pdf> (1988) aims
to have at least one-third of the country’s total land area under forest or
tree cover, but planting trees without careful consideration can in fact do
more harm than good. Time for some introspection (or intreespection, as you
will).
*What tree am I planting?*
The aforementioned Ladakhi willow proved a sensible choice
<http://www.thehindubusinessline.in/bline/2010/10/11/stories/2010101151660300.htm>
in
that particular instance – the roots of these willows bind the soil and
prevent erosion. But if the green baby you are inserting into the ground is
not native to your region, there’s every possibility they will catch
diseases and be zapped by the weather in a way that native trees won’t.
They may also require more water and other resources for their maintenance
than a city may not be able to afford. Non-native trees can also be harmful
to native flora – eucalyptus, which is widely planted in India, strips the
soil of moisture and nutrients and renders the soil in the area infertile.
They can also be eye-poppingly expensive, costing huge amounts of public
money. The government of Punjab, for instance, has been on a spree to plant
date palms in the last few years; Amritsar has date palms lining the road
from the city to the airport. While some claim the trees cost Rs 12,000
each, members of Amritsar-based NGO Mission Aagaaz claim they cost Rs
20,000 each. “We have filed an RTI application so we can have this on
record,” says G Gurbhej, the organization’s secretary.
*Is my tree going to kill someone?*
You have romantic notions of creating a shady canopy for your unborn
grandchildren and decide to plant Rain trees or Silver Oaks. But the roots
of giant, sprawling trees in cramped urban spaces may damage compound
walls, building foundations and water and sewage pipelines. Or in the
monsoon, falling trees and branches can be deadly for pedestrians and
motorists on the street. Bangalore’s municipal body, the Bruhat Bangalore
Mahanagara Palike (BBMP), has decided to stop planting Gulmohars in the
city as it believes they’re a nuisance
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/No-more-Gulmohars-says-BBMP/articleshow/35081677.cms>,
particularly
because of falling branches when it rains.
*Why am I stuck on flowers?*
Vinay Sreenivasa, an activist with Hasiru-Usiru – a network of
organizations and individuals in Bangalore concerned about protecting
equitable access to public spaces – believes that now and then, it’s nice
to have some ornamental trees such as Tabebuia, which dot Bangalore with
showers of pink flowers every spring, or Rain and Gulmohar trees that
provide the city with shade. But he cautions that it’s also important to
have varied species, and not have streets lined only with avenue or
ornamental trees. “We need to consider what purpose we want a tree to serve
in a particular area, and select the species and location accordingly. Why
aren’t we planting more fruit trees, given the state of our food security?”
Santhosh George of WePlant India, which promotes the planting of
indigenous, location-specific fruit trees in public places, believes
planting fruit trees will enhance biodiversity and fight malnourishment.
“In northern India, trees such as mango, jamun, guava, pomegranate and
gooseberry grow well, while in the south, it’s mulberry and papaya. In
northeast India, we promote the planting of oranges, plums, and sometimes
apples, because they do well there.”
*Where am I sticking my sapling?*
Sreenivasa says: “It’s also important to consider where trees are being
planted. It isn’t enough to plant trees in schools or army campuses. It’s
vital to have trees along roads to provide shade and improve air quality.
The BBMP tends to focus on areas in the outskirts, but it’s the city center
that also needs more trees.”
In fact, in cramped portions of cities where planting trees may not be an
option, rooftops gardens and green walls are a great alternative, says
Mumbai-based activist and research fellow at Observer Research Foundation
Rishi Aggarwal. There’s Eat Your Street
<https://www.facebook.com/eatyourstreet> in Bangalore, which aims to
transform neglected public spaces into thriving, edible gardens with
low-maintenance plants such as ragi or horse gram. Or groups like Grow Your
Own Veggies in Chennai or Urban Leaves <http://www.urbanleaves.org/> in
Mumbai, which provide spaces for urban farming enthusiasts to connect.
There are ways to work around limitations of space, Uday Acharya, trustee
of the Vidya Varidhi Trust, points out: “You can even have pots on your
window sill.”
*Do I think a planted tree is a cure for everything?*
The website Treesforfree.org <http://www.treesforfree.org/> urges people to
plant trees, encouraging them to “Become global cool”. “So you use a motor
vehicle and electrical appliances that are responsible for causing global
warming?” reads it website. “No problem. Just plant trees that will absorb
the greenhouse gases you’re responsible for.” Unfortunately, it doesn’t
work that way. Aggarwal says he actually discourages people from planting
trees. “People are happy to keep using cars, air conditioners and
smartphones even if means chunks of forest in the Amazon will go missing,
but they’ll plant saplings anyway. It reflects an inherent intellectual
laziness.”
*So now I should hate trees?*
Absolutely not. Tree planting is necessary and very doable. But to really
make a difference, it’s necessary to take responsibility for educating
oneself about trees. Experts across the board say the key focus has to be
maintaining trees and keeping survival rates high – making sure their roots
have enough space to grow, identifying and removing dead or infected
branches, and making sure they have enough water. “Saplings also need
adequate protection such as fencing, to keep away cattle,” says Shubhendu
Sharma, founder-director of Afforestt, a company that creates native
forests.
*Don’t go chasing that Guinness*
R Seshadri of Hasiru Usiru says it’s important to have smaller goals.
“Instead of 3,000 trees, think 300. Make sure you plant the right species
of saplings, water them and maintain them.” The BBMP, he points out, claims
to have planted 10.5 lakh saplings in the last 6 years. “We did a rapid
census in several wards, and found that in many instances, the success rate
was only about 15 percent. It’s important to have a good survival rate.”
Last heard, the Karnataka High Court ordered the BBMP todraw up an action
plan to ensure accountability
<http://bangalore.citizenmatters.in/articles/hc-asks-bbmp-to-draft-action-plan-to-track-and-save-planted-trees>
and
maintenance of trees that it claimed to have planted since 2007.
*Who will answer my questions about trees?*
Aggarwal believes having a good institutional mechanism in cities for tree
planting is vital. “Ideally the MCGM [Municipal Corporation of Greater
Mumbai] shouldn’t be doing the planting; they should have detailed GIS maps
pointing out underground cables and pipelines across the city, indicating
to people where it is safe to plant trees.” R. Seshadri, botanist and
member of Hasiru-Usiru, also believes an institutional mechanism is
necessary, and rues that municipal bodies and forest departments do not
have have experts trained in horticulture – ones who will be able to give
advice on which species to pick, how to plant them and even whether you
should plant them at all. “They need to coordinate with scientific bodies
and institutions who can advise them on these matters,” he says.
*Trees need policy, not just manure.*
“We urgently need a tree policy for Bangalore,” says Sreenivasa, a plea
activists in other cities echo. Bangalore owes much of its tree cover to SG
Neginhal, who as a forest officer in the 1980s planted 15 lakh saplings of
over 150 species in Bangalore between 1982 and 1987
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/Man-of-the-forests-who-made-Bangalore-green/articleshow/30536482.cms>,
with a high survival rate. His tree-planting drive is said to have inspired
the inclusion of Urban Forestry in subsequent Five Year Plans.
George says that Gadkari’s move to plant trees along national highways is
welcome, but he has a request to the government: before varieties such as
eucalyptus are planted along our highways, how about formulating a plan to
plant indigenous fruit trees?
*Deepika Sarma is Assistant Editor, Grist Media.*
_._,_.___



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