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Kaushik, P. K.
- Participatory Approach to Watershed Management in India
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Indian Forester, Vol 133, No 12 (2007), Pagination: 1659-1668Abstract
Watershed development programmes are aimed to mitigate the adverse effect of drought on crops and livestock, controlling desertification, encouraging restoration of ecological balance and promoting economic development of village community. Being a people oriented programme, it requires people's participation at various levels. Participatory approach is indeed a dynamic group process in which all members of a group contribute to the attainment of common objectives, share benefits accruing from group activities, exchange information and experience of common interest, and follow the rules, regulations and other decisions made by the group. Need for people's participation is articulated in terms of efficiency and/or costeffectiveness, equity in distribution of benefits, sustainability and empowerment of the people. In recent years watershed management has become the focal point of agricultural and rural development in rainfed areas of India and there has been increasing decentralization of responsibilities for management of natural resources to the community level. Role of people's participation and community organization in management of watersheds are discussed in this paper.- Potential of Bamboo in Vegetative Embankment
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Indian Forester, Vol 131, No 11 (2005), Pagination: 1449-1458Abstract
The Brahmaputra basin in India, particularly its valley in Assam, represents an acutely flood-prone region and occurrence of flood has been an age-old phenomenon in the riverine areas. During the rainy season, the rivers not only become filled up with water, but the excess amount of water also spill over their banks flooding their neighbouring regions. At the same time bank erosion occurs in almost all the large rivers destroying human habitats and their crop fields. The greatest single casualty due to recurrent floods, accounting for as much as 75 per cent of the total flood loss is the agricultural sector which happens to be the mainstay of the economy. Accelerated erosion due to deforestation and increased pressure on land due to explosion of population is a major cause of this increase in sediment yield. Biological means of protection against erosion are the cheap and simple practical solution that must be technically suitable for different conditions, economically viable with respect to the cost of both initial establishment/maintenance, ecofriendly, people-oriented and sustainable. Vegetative embankment models based on Bamboo and other species endemic to the northeast region can be a cost effective and sustainable solution to the alarming problem of soil stabilization and river bank erosion. The paper presents the various a!tpects of bank erosion in BrahmaputraValley and suggests vegetative controls for talking the problem.- Vegetative Propagation through Air Layering of Guadua angustifolia Kunth. - a Commercially Important Bamboo
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1 Rain Forest Research Institute Deovan Sotai Ali, Post Box # 136, Jorhat -785001 (Assam), IN
2 Environment Management, ICFRE, Dehradun, Uttarakhand, IN
1 Rain Forest Research Institute Deovan Sotai Ali, Post Box # 136, Jorhat -785001 (Assam), IN
2 Environment Management, ICFRE, Dehradun, Uttarakhand, IN
Source
Indian Forester, Vol 139, No 12 (2013), Pagination: 1088-1091Abstract
Guadua angustifolia Kunth. tree is a potential resource as structural and ornamental building material due to its high mechanical strength. The air layering of side branches of G. angustifolia using dry Sphagnum khasinum moss as substrate has initiated early ischolar_maining in rainy season compared to winter season as well as control conditions.Keywords
Air-layering, Guadua angustifolia, Rooting, Vegetative PropagationReferences
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- Dabral, S.N. (1950). Diversities, reproductive biology and strargies for germplasm conservation of bamboos. In. Bamboo and Rattan Genetic Resource and use (V. R. Rao and A. N. Rao eds.). IPGRI, Singapore. pp. 1 -22.
- Hazarika, P. (2008). Biofertilizer and vermicompost for productivity enhancement of bamboo In: A hand book of propagation cultivation and management of bamboo (B. K. Pandey, Y. C. Tripathi and P. Hazarika eds.), Van Vigyan Kendra, Rain Forest Research Institute, Jorhat (Assam) pp. 59 - 67.
- Joshi, R., Tewari, S.K. and Kaushal R. (2012). Rooting behavior of Bambusa balcooa Roxb. In relation to season, age and growing condition, Indian Forester, 138 (1): 79 – 83.
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- Kumari, S., Kumar. R., Chakrovourty, S.K., Chandra, R., Sinha, A. and Nath S. (2012). Effect of growth promotining substances rhizome separation technique on clonal propagation of Bambusa vulgaris var. striata, Indian Forester, 138 (2): 116 -121.
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- Pathak, K.C., Neog, D., Deka, B., Bora, E.D. and Bora, K. (2008). Morphology - An aid for bamboo identification. In: A hand book of propagation cultivation and management of bamboo (B.K. Pandey, Y.C. Tripathi and P. Hazarika eds.), Van Vigyan Kendra, Rain Forest Research Institute, Jorhat (Assam) pp. 9 - 18.
- Razvi, S. and Nautiyal, S. (2012). Vegetative propagation of Bambusa vulgaris var. striata (Yellow bamboo) through juvenile branch cuttings: A new technique, Indian Forester, 138 (4): 392 – 394.
- Takahashi, J. (2006). Bamboo in Latin America: Past, Present and the Future, In: Bamboo for the Environment, Development and Trade (Abstracts and Papers published in International Bamboo Workshop Wuyishan City, Fujian, China on 23 October 2006, Sponsored by International Network for Bamboo and Rattan China State Forestry Administration Fujian Provincial Government, pp.4-12.
- A Note on Sundew (drosera Burmannii Vahl.) from North-eastern India and their Conservation through Sphagnum Moss
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Authors
Affiliations
1 Shifting Cultivation Division, Rain forest Research Institute, Sotai Ali, Deovan, Post Box # 136, Jorhat 785 001 (assam), IN
2 Environment Management Division, Icfre, Deherdun, GB
3 National Botanical Research Institute, Rana Pratap Marg, Lucknow -226 001, IN
4 Centre for forestry Extension, Research&ecotourism, Agartala (tripura), IN
1 Shifting Cultivation Division, Rain forest Research Institute, Sotai Ali, Deovan, Post Box # 136, Jorhat 785 001 (assam), IN
2 Environment Management Division, Icfre, Deherdun, GB
3 National Botanical Research Institute, Rana Pratap Marg, Lucknow -226 001, IN
4 Centre for forestry Extension, Research&ecotourism, Agartala (tripura), IN