Published on: May 18, 2024
TREE LOSS IN INDIAN FARMLANDS
TREE LOSS IN INDIAN FARMLANDS
NEWS – New study reveals Nearly 6 million trees disappeared from Indian farmlands in three years
HIGHLIGHTS
- Tree Loss in Indian Farmlands:
- Nearly 5.8 million full-grown trees lost from agricultural lands between 2019 and 2022.
- Study conducted by researchers at the University of Copenhagen, published in Nature Sustainability.
- Satellite Imagery Analysis:
- Analysis used satellite imagery from RapidEye and PlanetScope.
- Study tracked large trees with average crown size of 96 sq.m.
- Detected an 11% disappearance of such trees from 2010-2011 to 2018-2022.
- Focus and Methodology:
- Focused on farmlands, covering 56% of India.
- Utilized machine learning to estimate trends starting from 2010.
- Regional Impact:
- Significant tree losses in central India, especially Telangana and Maharashtra.
- Up to 50% loss of large trees in hotspot areas, with up to 22 trees per square kilometer disappearing.
- Smaller hotspots of loss observed around Indore in eastern Madhya Pradesh.
- Possible Causes:
- Conversion of farmland to paddy fields cited as a plausible reason.
- Discrepancies due to image quality noted, but images from 2018 to 2022 deemed reliable.
- Contrasting Reports:
- Forest Survey of India (FSI) reports overall tree cover increase from 2019 to 2021.
- FSI surveys focus on acreage rather than individual trees.
- Implications:
- Importance of monitoring individual tree loss in agricultural areas.
- Highlights critical, yet overlooked, changes in tree cover in the world’s largest agricultural region.