What explains Delhi’s love affair with palm trees?
- October 22, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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What explains Delhi’s love affair with palm trees?
Subject :Environment
Context-
- Underneath the Lajpat Nagar flyover in South Delhi is a group of newly planted palm trees that are far away from what would have been their natural home – California in the United States.
- The species, Washingtoniafilifera, with fan-shaped leaves and a stout trunk, commonly called the ‘California fan palm’, is the newest addition to the city’s greenscape.
- The palm trees under the flyover will soon be joined by the Chinese fan palm or Livistona chinensis, a small tree that is native to subtropical parts of China and Japan.
- On Lodhi Road, the Chinese fan palm and foxtail palm (native to Australia) are among the species that are being planted.
California fan palm
- Scientifically known as Washingtoniafilifera, the desert fan palm, California fan palm, or California palm, is a flowering plant in the palm family Arecaceae, native to the far southwestern United States and Baja California, Mexico.
- Growing 15–20 m (49–66 ft) tall by 3–6 m (10–20 ft) broad, it is an evergreen monocot with a tree-like growth habit.
- It has a sturdy, columnar trunk and waxy, fan-shaped (palmate) leaves.
Frond of the problem
- Palm trees serve a purely ornamental purpose and are only for beautification.
- These are usually planted along with other trees that have more of a role to play — like those that give shade.
- These palms (California and date) survive in Delhi, but they need proper maintenance.
- Experts say the palms don’t serve much of an ecological purpose in Delhi.
- The purpose of urban plantations is that they should have an ecological function and serve as a filter for air pollutants.
- The Washingtonia palm neither adds to the beauty of the landscape nor does it provide an effective filter for air pollutants.
- Delhi already has an existing issue with the vilayatikikar or the Prosopis juliflora, a non-native,invasive species planted in Delhi by the British.
- Thevilayatikikar, a tree native to Mexico, has taken over much of Delhi’s Ridge, suppressing the growth of other, native plants.
- juliflora has been included in the Global Invasive SpeciesDatabase (GISD 2010). It has been listed as a noxious weed in all Australian states and in Hawaii.
Description of Vilayatikikar or Prosopis juliflora-
- Prosopis julifloratree is native to Mexico.
- It is a thorny shrub 3-5 m or tree growing up to 15 m in height.
- It has a thick rough grey-green bark that becomes scaly with age.
- The plants are often multi-stemmed and furnished with abundant large and very sharp thorns measuring up to 5 cm.
- The tree is deeply rooted.
- The stems are shaped in a “mild zigzag” way with one or two stout thorns at each turn of the stem.
- Leaves are (bipinnatetwice-compound ) with mostly two, sometimes more pairs of pinnae, 6-8 cm long, 12-25 pairs of oblong leaflets per pinna, 6-16 mm long, 1.5-3.2 mm wide.
- The flowers are fragrant golden-yellow,dense spikes about 5-10 cm long.
- The fruit of P. juliflora is a cylindrical or slightly irregularly curved green pod which turns yellow upon ripening.
- It is 10-20 cm long, sweet to taste and contains 10-20 hard oval or elliptic seeds (2.5-7 mm long) that are difficult to extract.
- Its roots are able to grow to a great depth in search of water: in 1960, they were discovered at a depth of 53 meters (175 feet) at an open-pit mine near Tucson, Arizona putting them among the deepest known roots.
- This plant reproduces through seed.
Uses-
- Various Prosopis species have beneficial qualities which include erosion control, shade, fuelwood, building materials, and pods for animal and human consumption in arid and semi-arid regions.
Environmental concern-
- The fact that there are clear economic uses for this species but severe negative consequences of P. juliflora invasion makes this a conflict of interest species.
- Concern over the tree is it does not let any other tree or shrubs survive around it.
- These trees can dry up underground aquifers through their deep-root system, going as far as 20 metres or more in search of water, significantly higher than around 5 metres that native shrubs and trees go.
- The tree’s canopy is such that it does not let sunlight reach the ground, which also hinders growth of other species.
Some of Delhi’s palm trees-
Common name | Scientific name | Native to |
California fan palm | Washingtoniafilifera | California |
Chinese fan palm | Livistona chinensis | Parts of China, Japan |
Wild date palm/khajur | Phoenix sylvestris | India, Sri Lanka |
Royal Palm | Roystonea regia | Parts of Cuba |