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Sundari Trees In Sundarban Delta Are Dying A Slow Death. Is Anyone Listening?

Sundari trees, after which the mangrove forest is named, are on the brink of extinction in West Bengal due to excessive logging in the past for its high value wood and now with seawater rise.

The story of the Sundari is as fascinating as its namesake 바카라 the Sundarbans, the world바카라s largest contiguous mangrove forest, situated in the eastern state of West Bengal, India and Bangladesh. Sundari is as elusive as the most celebrated resident here바카라the Bengal tiger.

One might spend days on boats바카라the only way to tour the dense foliage of mangrove forest, which is also a designated , tiger reserve and mostly during the months of October to May, before the heavy monsoon showers바카라yet spot none of the two iconic species here. Ironically, both species have been assessed as endangered by International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) of threatened species.

Yet, one species is totally under the global spotlight, millions spent on its protection and conservation while the other dies a silent death, unknown and unsung. If you are wondering which is which, the Bengal tiger is the former and the Sundari tree, unfortunately, is the one that struggles to hold its ground.

Sundari means 바카라the beautiful바카라 in Bengali. And very few would recall today that the mangrove forest, a UNESCO world heritage site, itself is named after the once abundant Sundari tree.

(Bonnie Camp, Sunderban Biosphere Reserve)

The Sundari is the dominant  tree species of the Sundarbans of India and Bangladesh. Scientifically known as Heritiera fomes, it is a species of mangrove in the family Malvaceae. The Sundari tree can grow up to 60 feet in height with a girth of six feet. The tall hardy tree, with elliptic shaped leaves and micronutrient rich fruit, is threatened by over-harvesting, rise in salinity바카라a fall out of water diversions in the Ganges Basin, and coastal encroachment and top-dying disease. A July 2018 report in revealed that, 바카라In the last 30 years, 1.44 million cubic meters of Sundari trees, worth 2,000 crore Bangladeshi Taka, have been lost to 바카라top-dying disease.바카라

 A major timbre-producing tree, it has applications in as evidenced by its extensive use for treating diabetes, hepatic disorders, gastrointestinal disorders, goiter and skin diseases by the local people and traditional health practitioners. A number of investigations indicated that the Sundari tree possesses significant antioxidant, antinociceptive, antihyperglycemic, antimicrobial, and anticancer activities.

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The species is now on the brink of extinction in West Bengal due to excessive logging in the past for its high value wood and now with seawater rise. 바카라It is very difficult to find a Sundari tree in the Sundarbans as the species has a lower tolerance for saline seawater and there isn바카라t much high ground left, especially on the Indian part of the Sundarbans. Global warming has not just increased surface temperatures but also the  in the seawater,바카라 observes Santhosha Gubbi, IFS, Divisional Forest Officer, Sunderban Biosphere Reserve.

(Rhizophora apiculata/ Gorjon)

In the Bangladesh Sundarbans, illegal logging of Sundari trees continues unabatedly. In a February 2016 article by Habibur Rahman and Andrew Eagle for the , highlighted the dark side of the timber industry in the largest floating timber market in Pirojpur바카라s Nesarabad. 

바카라Before 1985, Sundari logs were sold openly, but in that year, in response to declining numbers the species was protected, with the felling, sale and transportation of Sundari logs banned. It바카라s now 31 years later and their sale is yet to cease바카라 바카라 the report stated.

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The report also revealed that: 바카라Smugglers use different techniques,바카라 explains one source, 바카라Sometimes Sundari logs are covered with coconut coir, sacks or other cargo to avoid detection. With one cubic foot of Sundari timber selling from 400 Bangladeshi Taka to 1500 Bangladeshi Taka according to size, there is money to be made.바카라

Rising Salinity

A by the Indian Institutes of Technology points out that unlike other mangrove species, Sundari prefers extremely low saline condition (5 바카라 15 psu / Practical Salinity Unit) and hence can act as biological indicator of climate change related to sea level rise. The tree can flourish luxuriantly under low salinity conditions. Physiological studies have revealed that mangroves are not salt lovers, rather salt-tolerant. But excessive saline conditions retard seed germination, impede growth and development of mangroves. When the salinity increases, the species becomes stunted, rare and ultimately disappears. The research shows the adverse impact of salinity on leaf chlorophyll of the species may significantly affect the rate of photosynthesis, as this pigment is an indispensable raw material for running the process. Various studies have shown that a number of mangrove species grow best at salinities between 4 psu and 15 psu and for Sundari, the preferred salinity range is much lower. At 15 psu the plants become acclimatized to salt after one to two weeks of exposure, but at 20 psu the seedlings could hardly adapt.

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(Sundari Tree. Bishnu Sarangi/Pixabay) 

Every day, up to 150 species are lost. Every year, between  become extinct. The narrative of species loss becomes even grimmer when crucial species like the Sundari starts disappearing from its habitat. Paul R Elrich, wildlife biologist from Stanford University and Gerardo Ceballos, ecologist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, with other colleagues have revisited their , which made global news  바카라 바카라The earth is entering the sixth mass extinction phase.바카라 The , published on June 1, estimates the rate of species extinction to be likely much higher than previously thought. The authors remind us that, 바카라The loss of a species is permanent, each of them playing a greater or lesser role in the living systems on which we all depend.바카라 

Studying and monitoring species loss in land vertebrates is somewhat a manageable task in comparison to invertebrates and plant life. Species are disappearing even faster than  can study and decipher them. This is an alarm call and a reason why this year the United Nations is putting the spotlight back on biodiversity with the theme 바카라Time For Nature바카라 on June 5, a day marked as World Environment Day to promote global awareness and action for the environment.

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Satellite data analysed by Earth.Org paints a dismal picture - the Sunderbans is slowly . Due to 바카라human encroachment and climate change, the forest has been losing almost 16 sq km of vegetation per year since 1991.바카라 A fortnight ago both the jungle and the city of Kolkata was in the eye of the biggest cyclone in recorded history -  (pronounced as "Um-p un", meaning the sky). The huge storm surge estimated around five metres (16.5 feet) inundated all low-lying areas leaving a trail of catastrophic . Sunderbans, a spread of 10,000 sq km, is no stranger to cyclonic storms but the frequency and intensity has gone up in recent years. In six months, the mangrove jungle has been struck twice 바카라 by  in November last year and Amphan in May this year.

(Sunderban landscape)

Amphan has undoubtedly left behind a deluge of humanitarian crisis (along with the lockdown to curb the COVID-19 pandemic) but what it has done to the natural ecosystem of Sundarbans is yet to be accessed.

Pradeep Vyas, former director of Sundarbans National Park, says: 바카라The super cyclone might have killed and displaced a large number of species which inhabit the delta. From fish to reptiles to mammalian inhabitants a huge number is likely to have perished in the cyclone, however we are not certain of the damage. But I fear the loss of prey, especially wild boar and deer population, might result in a diminishing prey base for the tiger, which in turn can aggravate human-tiger conflict in the region.바카라

Experts are of the opinion that the loss of human lives and livelihood could have been even more severe if not for the Sundarbans. This unique coastal ecosystem shock absorbs the initial impact of the storm and is said to reduce wind speed by 20-25 kms per hour before it makes inroads towards human settlements along the forest fringes.  Mangroves are natural , resilient to extreme weather events like cyclones, protecting coastal communities from frequent storm surges and reduce long-term deterioration of the inter-tidal zone. However, the long-term effects of climate change could erase this natural protection scheme.  Globally, the mangroves also account for 14 per cent of coastal .

Among the various reports coming in the aftermath of Amphan is that the vegetation in the peripheral forest has turned yellow due to the excessive saline water dumped by the cyclone. The current nature of water in the numerous river channels in Sunderbans is direct fallout of one of the several environmental  of dams on rivers - the slow continuous diminishing flow of fresh water downstream.

(A Tiger in Sunderban delta/Nikhil Devasar)

In 1975, the controversial  (dam) came up on the Ganga, the 바카라holy river바카라 of India, a few miles before the river meanders in to Bangladesh. Over the years as the fresh water flow reduced because of diversion for agricultural and other developmental needs the sea filled in the void especially in the delta.

Speaking from twenty years of field experience in Sundarbans, Vyas says, 바카라The entire central and western part of the Indian Sunderbans is now a backwater of the sea. The wide Matla River that we all sail to get into the tiger reserve is brackish except for the monsoon months. To my estimate there has been a staggering 95% decline in Sundari trees in the Indian part of the Sunderbans. The few trees, which are still standing, are along the international border with Bangladesh but they are not anywhere close to what a grand Sundari looks like as found on the eastern part of Bangladesh Sunderbans. In the Indian part of the jungle species such as  Dhundul (Xylocarpus granatum), Passur (Xylocarpus moluccensis), Kankra (Bruguiera gymnorhiza) Gewa (Excoecaria agallocha) and Goran (Ceriops decandra) have proliferated and taken over the space left by the Sundari.바카라

This shift in species composition is also highlighted in Swapan Kumar Sarker바카라s  where he has witnessed the local extinction or range contraction of many endemics including the Sundari in the Bangladesh Sunderbans in the last three decades.  바카라I found historical tree harvesting, siltation, disease and soil alkalinity as the key stressors that negatively influenced the diversity and distinctness of the mangrove communities in the Sunderbans.바카라 Sarkar바카라s work reveals that the Sundari is not also safe in Bangladesh Sundarbans, where 바카라top-dying disease바카라 is wreaking havoc. The affected trees go bald on the top and the stems show signs of swelling and formation of several knots known as 바카라heart-rot바카라. A 2018 report in  revealed that 바카라top-dying disease바카라 has killed 15 per cent of Sundari trees since the 1980s.

According to experts the rising temperatures and increase in salinity have also brought microbial-fungal diseases and insect pests. The past five years have been the warmest with heat records increasing every year since 2015. Researcher Katie Louise Awty-Carroll and team from the Department of Geography and Earth Sciences, Aberystwyth University, UK, has demonstrated through  of remote sensing data that there is a 25 per cent negative trend in mangrove cover due to the effect of die-back on Sundari trees. These areas are now at greater risk of decline in the future, especially if extreme events such as cyclones become more common. 

Negotiating one of the several small creeks in the mangrove, somewhere close to Bonnie camp (21°49'50"N, 88°37'24"E), forest guard Amin Chand Mondal ( also in video interview) reminisces of the 1970s and 80s when logging permission was given in different forest blocks for the Sundari. 바카라This in all likelihood was the death knell for the species for its timber was much sought-after for making boats, bridges and houses.바카라 Mondal says that most of the grand old Sundari trees fell to the axe, the ones that survived human greed faced an existential crisis. 바카라There was a time when the Sundari tree was abundant in the mangrove forest, but today spotting it is like looking for a needle in a haystack.바카라

There are many like Mondal in the West Bengal Forest Department who valiantly guard the almost-impenetrable Sundarbans mangrove, night and day, under difficult circumstances, beating inclement weather and the omnipresent threat of life from wild animals, especially the tiger. They know every little creek and island (which looks the same to an outsider) in this dense forest and have superb eye for spotting 바카라species and poachers, even illegal honey gatherers. They are invariably at a loss, especially the older generation, when a tourist or naturalist inquires after the intangible Sundari. Some of the younger guards have never seen the Sundari except for the small plantations undertaken by the forest department in their outposts. For several years visitors, including scientific experts, have come back from the forest dejected without having spotted the species. It is no irony that the visual signage promoting and depicting Sunderbans - posters, brochures and other paraphernalia - does not even mention the Sundari tree. Instead what we see is the red mangrove (Rhizophora apiculata, locally known as Gorjon) with its extensive aerial prop roots as its signature species.

Mondal adds as an afterthought: 바카라It is still possible to revive the growth of Sundari; saplings can be grown in nurseries and transplanted in the forest. It will be a difficult task for forest guards like me to leave the safety of the boat, negotiate low-lying deep swamp to reach higher ground to replant the saplings, that too in tiger terrain, but if Sundarbans can once again have the Sundari tree back, I can risk my life for it.바카라

(Ananda Banerjee is an author, journalist and environmentalist. He tweets @protectwildlife)

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