HomeNewsEnvironmentHow the love for trees in Bengaluru, home to a biodiversity heritage site, is fast waning

How the love for trees in Bengaluru, home to a biodiversity heritage site, is fast waning

City planners don’t realise the value of the indigenous trees, says Harish Padmanabha, grandson of Rao Bahadur HC Javaraya, the first Indian superintendent of Lalbagh Botanical Gardens.

October 08, 2023 / 20:48 IST
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A tree needs about 2-inch by 2-inch space and even that is not given. City planners don't consider the importance of indigenous trees. (Photos: Jayanthi Madhukar)
A tree needs about 2-inch by 2-inch space and even that is not given. City planners don't consider the importance of indigenous trees. (Photos: Jayanthi Madhukar)

In an act of vandalism, Britain’s most famous tree was felled last month. The Sycamore Gap tree was hundreds of years old and its ‘murder’ hit the headlines world over as outrage poured in. The intangible value of a symbol that was associated with generations is inexplicable. In India, some of the unique and ecologically fragile ecosystems have been declared as national biodiversity sites.

Britain’s most famous tree, Sycamore Gap, was felled in an act of vandalism, in Northumberland, Britain, on September 28, 2023. (Photo: Lee Smith/Reuters)

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The first biodiversity site in India, declared in 2007, is the Nallur Tamarind Grove, just 8 km from Bengaluru’s Kempegowda International Airport. The grove of around 287 tamarind trees is spread across 54 acres and is believed to have been planted in the 12th century during the reign of Chola king Rajendra Chola. A small board announces the grove which has the newly renovated Gangadevi Temple at its doorstep.

The newly renovated Gangadevi Temple, Bengaluru. (Photo: Jayanthi Madhukar)