The Indian Express 11.02.2014
Armed with hi-tech gadgets, BMC begins tree count
Two minutes to record the GPS location of the tree, another two to
measure the girth using a measuring tape, another 5-7 minutes to
identify it and note its characterisitcs and that’s one tree down. For
an entire year, 30 people, including surveyors and botanists, will
record information of trees as part of Brihanmumbai Municipal
Corporation’s (BMC’s) tree census, which began Monday at Oval Maidan in
Churchgate.
For the first time, the surveyors will use Trimble GPS units to note
the location of a tree. This information along with a unique ID for each
tree with its characteristics will be superimposed on the civic body’s
geographic information system (GIS) map. While citizens can zoom in on
the map to get the basic details, junior tree officers in each ward can
access the entire data on the tree using a code, according to the
gardens department.
“BMC will for the first time have data about the geographical
distribution of a particular species in the city. We will now be able to
store data of the city’s tree cover on a live platform and the trees
will have unique IDs, making it easier to track them,” said SVR
Srinivas, Additional Municipal Commissioner. “We urge citizens to
cooperate and allow access to the surveyors to record trees inside their
property,” he added.
Besides the location and girth, information such as the tree’s canopy
diameter and type, the tree’s condition as well as the carbon
sequestration potential (potential to trap atmospheric carbon dioxide)
will be available. Special remarks indicating whether the tree is
diseased, was mechanically cut or had been uprooted or whether it has a
cement collar around it, will also be included in the report. Photos of
rare species, trees of “heritage and cultural value” as well as
endangered species will be available after the census is done.
Monday’s counting was part of the pilot survey, which will have
information of 1,000 trees and will be ready in three-four days. “The
target is to record information of at least two-three lakh trees in a
month,” said Dhanya Nambiar, chief taxonomist in charge of the census.
The census will cost the civic body Rs 2.7 crores and is being
conducted jointly by Mumbai-based SAAR IT Resources and Nagpur-based
Apex Spatial Tech Solutions. The tree census includes survey of all
existing trees within municipal limits irrespective of ownership,
excluding trees in Aarey Colony, BARC, Navy Nagar, and forests area like
Sanjay Gandhi National Park and mangrove areas.