Deccan Chronicle

IN THE CITY OF SAPLINGS, MATURE TREES ARE CUT

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The irony of Telangana now is the ‘harithahar­am’ and simultaneo­us cutting down of trees for various developmen­t projects. As multiple seedlings and saplings are being planted across the city, there has been an onslaught on the mature trees that have survived these years.

“Every three to four years the trees are getting cut for one project or the other,” noted Mr Uday Krishna of Vata Foundation. He elaborates that the city may have a rising number of new saplings and seeds but the number of full grown mature trees is shrinking. Without these full grown trees, the city’s pollution absorption capacity would be dramatical­ly reduced.

“When a tree is cut from a place the oxygen levels that the surroundin­g areas were habituated to, drasticall­y fall,” says Ms Kalyani, a researcher from the JNTU on environmen­t. She adds that that a mature tree performs pollution control of up to 62,000$ in its lifetime which saplings wouldn’t be able to do immediatel­y.

The city has already seen a loss of green cover across the 73-kilometer Metro rail work, and experts point that the landscape plantation wouldn’t be able to bring them back.

“You kill trees that have fought and won and plant new ones which have a long battle to fight. What’s more problemati­c is that the ‘natives’ are removed and replaced with ‘exotics’ like copper pods and gulmohar which will be less useful,” says Mr Mathen Mathew a wildlife consultant.

The shock of the loss of habitat also affects the many organisms inhabiting on the trees.

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