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HomeLifestyleDrones to monitor forests, labs to rejuvenate soil: How an organization is using AI to conserve Eastern Himalayan landscapes
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Drones to monitor forests, labs to rejuvenate soil: How an organization is using AI to conserve Eastern Himalayan landscapes

World Environment Day: Drones are being used to plant seed balls prepared using the indigenous community knowledge of native species, local conditions, optimal zones and time for seed dispersal.

June 05, 2025 / 13:31 IST
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In difficult mountain terrains, drones can help with precision seeding in denuded forest regions. (Representational image; photo credit: dephshot via Pexels)

The Eastern Himalayas (EHS) have always seen environmental and climatic threats in the form of extreme weather events, deforestation, loss of habitat, untimely and excessive flooding, landslides and increasing population density. These pressures have severely degraded the landscapes. For centuries, these landscapes have been home to indigenous communities which share a deep bond with nature. As the true stewards of the forests, they have preserved and managed their ecosystems through traditional knowledge systems like sacred groves, seed banks to controlled burning and time-tested planting techniques. These systems have not only helped sustain biodiversity but also ensured forest resilience consequently building community resilience across generations. Though effective, such practices are often labour-intensive and physically demanding. In the case of Eastern Himalaya, the unpredictable terrain has been an additional challenge hindering community effort and reducing the scalability of community led restoration efforts. But in recent years, technology has quietly been solving this problem and making forest restoration and conservation easier. One could never imagine technology aiding indigenous conservation to amplify the efforts of local communities. Restoration is becoming not just easier, but smarter and more inclusive.

Drones as forest healers

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Until a few years back, there was buzz around the potential of drones to revolutionize forestry. They were pitched as a more cost-effective and efficient alternative to traditional methods for mapping and monitoring forest health. Today, they are literally taking flight across different parts of the world and proving to be a game changer in forestry. They can capture high-resolution pictures and videos when mapping forest health and also allow building 3D models of forests to help track changes to forest health over a long time. This allows for more precise monitoring of deforestation and to understand the subtle yet profound impacts of climate change on forests. While these drones provide a suite of technologies for forestry, one of the most powerful tools is aerial seed dispersal. By enabling precision seeding over large, inaccessible areas, drones are bringing down costs and resources and improving overall restoration outcomes. This becomes helpful in the difficult terrains of the EHR where restoration efforts are often hindered by the landscape.

In the valleys of the Eastern Himalaya, a quiet revolution is being led by youth leaders from the indigenous communities who are leveraging technology for ecological restoration at speed and scale. Imagine a drone hovering over the community forest land in Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh being controlled by a young, enterprising Namge Khandu from Monpa community for carpet bombing of ‘seed balls’ over degraded forests. In the age of AI, youth leaders like Namge are playing a key role in bringing open-source AI platforms and communities together to restore their ecosystems and heal their lands.