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Forest and Tree Cover |
Smt. Kalpana Palkhiwala |
Forest survey is the act of making
measurements and assessments of various forest related physical
parameters, such as forest area, forest cover, growing stock,
distribution of tree species, extent of forest fire damage, etc.
The information generated may be spatial (presentable on maps)
or non-spatial (shown through statistical tables). This
information provided by forest survey is essential for judicious
planning, development and management of forest resources.
Forest, a renewable natural resource, occupies a unique position
due to its role in maintaining ecological balance and
environmental stability and in sustaining economic development.
Under the pressure of demands from ever-increasing population,
the forests, which initially seemed inexhaustible, are
struggling for survival leading to over all deterioration in the
environment, threatening the very existence of civilization.
Over the last two decades, concern about the world’s forests has
risen dramatically on the global political agenda. Large areas
of the world’s forests, which served in subsistence and
advancement of human kind, have been converted to other uses or
severely degraded. There is a need to use all possible tools and
information to manage and utilize forest resources wisely and
scientifically in a sustainable manner. Application of forest
survey techniques generates such information that can be used
for sound management of forest resources.
Forest Cover Assessment
Space borne Remote Sensing technology has proved to be an
important tool in rapid assessment and mapping of natural
resources over a large area with reasonable accuracy.
Application of satellite data in assessment of forest cover in
India was first demonstrated by the National Remote Sensing
Agency (NRSA), Department of Space, Hyderabad in 1985, when it
came out with the first ever estimate of country’s forest cover
based on interpretation of Landsat (an American Satellite )
data. Almost simultaneously Forest Survey of India (FSI) started
interpreting satellite data for assessment of forest cover of
the country and published the country’s forest cover in 1987
using Landsat (MSS) data. Thereafter, FSI was mandated to assess
and map the forest cover of the country on a two-year cycle and
monitor the changes in forest cover of the country during the
intervening period. Since then FSI is assessing and mapping
forest cover of the country using satellite data on a two-year
cycle. Results of these assessments are published in the form of
a biennial report – State of Forest Report (SFR). So far FSI has
completed ten biennial assessments, the latest being the State
of Forest Report, 2005. During this period, there has been a
rapid development in satellite-based technology and also in
related high-end hardware and software for digital image
processing of satellite data. FSI kept pace with these
developments by continuously updating its methodology to suit
the new developments. Each assessments had improvement over the
previous one with the addition of unique features.
The technological improvement in the quality of data as well as
the imaging software has led to improvement in the accuracy of
the assessment of the forest cover. The scale of forest cover
maps increased to the present 1:50,000 scale. The minimum
mappable area (cartographic limit) of the assessment was
improved from 400ha in the 1987 assessment to 1ha in the eighth
and ninth assessment.
Forest Cover in Hill Districts
Forest cover in hills is essential to maintain ecological
balance and environmental stability as it prevents soil erosion
and land degradation. The National Forest Policy (1988) aims at
maintaining two thirds of the geographical area in hills of the
country under forest and tree cover.
Forests Survey of India(FSI) has been assessing forest cover in
the hill districts of the country since 1997. The hill districts
identified for the forest cover analysis are the same as other
identified by the Planning Commission for Hill Areas and Western
Ghats Development Programme. As per the Planning Commission’s
criterion, a hill taluka is the one with altitude more than 500m
from the mean sea level. A hill district is the one whose total
area of hill talukas is more than half of the geographic area of
the district. Based on this criterion, there are 124 hill
districts spread over 16 States and UTs.
The forest cover in the hill districts is 274,932 sq.km., which
is 38.85% of the total geographic area of these districts. Out
of 124 hill districts, 55 have over two thirds of geographic
area under forest cover; 36 have been between one third and two
third; and 33 have less than one third. Moreover, forest cover
is less than ten percent of geographic area in ten hill
districts.
Compared to the 2003 assessment of forest cover, there has been
a loss of forest cover of 255 sq. km in the above hill districts
mainly due to the practice of shifting cultivation.
Forest Cover in Tribal Districts
Forests have traditionally played a central role in the economy
of tribal people who are also known to protect forests and to
live in harmony with nature. Since, 1997, FSI has been assessing
forest cover in the district identified as tribal district by
the Government in the Integrated Tribal Development Programme.
This includes all the districts of the State of Arunachal
Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura.
The UTs of Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Lakshadweep have also been
considered as tribal districts.
Although all tribal districts constitute only 33.57% geographic
area of the country, the forest cover in these districts is
60.11 % of the total. All the North-Eastern States have over 75%
geographic area under forest cover, except Assam (23.89% in 16
tribal districts) and Sikkim (45.97%). Overall, these figures
indicate the richness of forest resources in the tribal
districts in general, and in North-East region in particular.
The country is endowed with rich and diverse forest vegetation.
The forests vary from alpine to coastal forests and from rain
forests to arid forests. The recorded forest area of the country
is 769,626 sq.km. (23.41% of the country’s geographic area) and
the forest cover of the country as per the 2005 assessment is
677,088 sq.km. (20.60% of country’s geographic area). The volume
of growing stock in the forest is estimated to be about 4,602
million cu.m. Being the second most populous and seventh largest
country in the world having a population of over 1 billion with
1.8 per cent of world’s Forest Cover. It is sustaining the needs
of 17% of human and 18% of the livestock population of the
world.
*Assistant Director ( M & C), PIB, New Delhi
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