{"id":100285,"date":"2023-01-24T15:49:48","date_gmt":"2023-01-24T10:19:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/?post_type=newss&p=100285"},"modified":"2023-01-24T15:49:48","modified_gmt":"2023-01-24T10:19:48","slug":"assam-shielding-hijol-a-floodplain-tree-from-climate-impacts","status":"publish","type":"newss","link":"https:\/\/www.icsf.net\/newss\/assam-shielding-hijol-a-floodplain-tree-from-climate-impacts\/","title":{"rendered":"Assam: Shielding hijol, a floodplain tree, from climate impacts"},"content":{"rendered":"

The water-loving evergreen tree, hijol, adapted to floodplains, has been traditionally managed over millennia as family and community forest in the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna basin. A new study that works out the impact of climate change notes that the species distribution will be hit by erratic rainfall and temperature changes.The suitable habitat for hijol (Barringtonia acutangula) to grow in the India-Bangladesh landscape (IBL) may shrink by 50.57 percent due to rainfall and temperature changes, the study, which models current and future climate scenarios, predicts. The authors recommend that the IUCN assess the species vulnerability and list it in its assessment.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe chose Barringtonia acutangula for our study because of its socioeconomic importance among floodplain farmers. The primary vocation of the floodplain farmer is fish farming. The use of Barringtonia is intricately related to fish farming in Assam, which is why the species is so important to study for its conservation,\u201d Arun Jyoti Nath at the Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Assam University and the corresponding author of the study told Mongabay India.The branches of t he trees are used in fisheries to check for predators as the network of branches provide hiding spaces for the fish during threats by predators. Complex branches hinder illegal fishing by other fishermen as well. Additionally, the rough branch surface is conducive to grow algae.<\/p>\n

Barringtonia acutangula grows on banks of the river, edges of freshwater swamps and lagoons and seasonally-flooded lowland plains, where often it is the dominant species, from the sea level up to about 400 m of altitude.<\/p>\n