Submitted by admin4 16 July 2012
By Richa Sharma, IANS,
New Delhi : Indian scientists have been successful in conserving 131
trees at the 800-year-old Ta Prohm temple in Cambodia, better known as
'Temple Tree'.
Experts from the Dehradun-based Forest Research Institute (FRI) along
with the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) have been working on the
Conservation and Restoration of Ta Prohm Temple (Cambodia) Project under
the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme (ITEC) of the
external affairs ministry.
The team, which has been working there since 2007, has started seeing
some good results with improvement in the health of trees which were in
a bad shape, threatening the monument built in the late 12th century by
Jayavarman VII of the Khmer empire in memory of his mother. The temple
is a Unesco World Heritage Site.
Different species of matured and young trees, some standing on the
ground and some on the walls and roofs of various structures, are seen
in the temple premises.
The most common tree species is Tetrameles nudiflora, locally known as 'Speung'.
N.S.K. Harsh, head of Forest Pathology at the Forest Research
Institute (FRI), said that before starting the project, they conducted a
survey and found that of the 131 trees in the premises, 36 needed
immediate attention.
"The trees were found under stress at the site due to heavy tourist
pressure, soil compaction, injuries to exposed roots and stems, cavities
in trees and exposed buttresses and basal rotting. Besides, a few trees
were dangerously leaning and causing the walls and other structures to
collapse under their weight," Harsh told IANS.
The tree height here ranges from 40 to 80 metres with huge trunks
while the girth exceeds more than three metres in some cases and
buttresses span up to 13 metres at the base.
The buttresses and roots are spreading all over the structures and ground, making them magnificent visual objects.
The institute's team carried out periodic treatment of the decayed
portion of trunks, stems and roots of the trees by using eco-friendly
material (an oleoresin tapped from a tree) followed by cavity filling
with polyurethane foam and wax.
The exposed roots of trees were covered with soil in different
sections. Periodic surface treatment with anti-fungal material on etched
surfaces was prescribed.
A prop was provided to support a dangerously leaning tree and was
designed to withstand its swaying and weight. A metallic support was
designed and erected below a wall collapsing under the weight of the
tree.
"I would say timely intervention by FRI has halted further
deterioration of tree health. The trees are now in a better health and
their life span has increased," Harsh said.
FRI has also carried out training classes for capacity building of
local stakeholders so that they can continue the conservation work on
their own post-2014 when the institute's contract ends.
Regular monitoring of tree health is being done to check the level of
decay, insect attacks, phenological behaviour and emerging tree growth
pattern.
This is not the first time that India is helping Cambodia in
restoration of a heritage site. Indian archaeologists had successfully
restored the world famous Angkor Vat temple in the country.
In India, the FRI has conserved the famous Bodhi tree ('pipal') in
Bodhgaya, a direct descendant of the original tree under which the
Buddha meditated. It has also conserved a neem tree in the Sai Baba
temple in Shirdi in Maharshtra.
(Richa Sharma can be contacted at richa.s@ians.in)
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