About
the Book
BAMBOO: In the Culture and Economy of Northeast India Bamboo is the most important forest produce used by the rural communities in several countries of the Asia-Pacific region. It is also an important source of income for the rural poor. In Asia, the history of bamboo is so inextricably interwoven with the history of man that it could be characterized as a bamboo civilization. Since this bio-resource is multipurpose and leads to the creation of new employment opportunities and income generation, especially in rural communities. The north eastern region of India is rich in diversity of bamboo. Bamboo popularly called, as poor man’s timber, is also integral to the life and culture of all the ethnic groups of this region. Its uses for house construction, cottage industry, household articles, agricultural implements and tools, fodder, medicine and even food has made it an indispensable commodity for the rural people. Continued technological advancement and researches have put bamboo into more and more ways of uses and as raw materials in several industries. The book briefly describes the importance of bamboo as a single commodity which is important source of raw material for varied end-uses and how bamboos are also used in a myriad ways by the rural people and are interwoven with their life style in many parts of India in particular and Asia in general.
About
the Author
Dr. C. Barooah, M. Sc., Ph. D. is Junior Scientific Officer of Assam Science Technology and Environment Council (ASTEC), Guwahati and Officer-In-Charge of Assam Bio-Resource Centre, Madan Kamdev. He has been working for conservation of rare, endangered and endemic plant species of north-eastern India in ex situ and in situ conditions. Under his guidance the Centre has developed into an important centre for conservation and cultivation of medicinal plants, canes, bamboos and other plant resources of the region. He is also involved in implementing various projects of Department of Science & Technology and Ministry of Environment & Forests, Govt. of India. Prior to his joining in ASTEC, he served in State Forest Research Institute (SFRI), Itanagar, Arunachal Pradesh. Dr. Barooah has two books and a number of research papers to his credit. Worthy of special mention is his book- Diversity and Distribution of Bamboos in Assam, in which, he described 40 bamboo species with their distribution and uses.
Foreword
Earth is
the only planet we know of with life on it. Animals, Plants and microorganisms
maintain a delicate balance with a variety of life forms we call Biodiversity.
Each species depends on other species for its existence. When we talk of life
on earth, we also talk about the human species. If we need to understand and
preserve our environment, we shall need to understand the interdependence of the
species on each other and the importance of natural resources like air, water
and soil for living beings.
Life has
continued to evolve on this earth over millions of years adapting to changing
environment. Only those species have survived that have adapted to the changing
environment. This change could be due to natural causes like earthquakes,
eruption of volcanoes, cyclones, and so on. It even could be due to climate
change. However, quite often this change is brought about by the species higher
up in the ladder of evolution that tries to control environment to suit its
needs and for development. This is precisely what human species has done to our
fragile planet.
We need
energy for development; which we traditionally obtain by burning natural resources
like firewood, coal and petroleum. This is what we have been doing for
centuries. Today there is consensus that human activities like burning of
fossil fuels and consequent pumping of gases like carbon dioxide into
atmosphere have been responsible for the earth getting hotter and hotter.
Today, there are threats to our planet arising from climate change, degrading
environment, the growing rate of extinction of species, declining availability
of fresh water, rivers running dry before they can reach sea, loss of fertile
land due to degradation, depleting energy sources, incidence of diseases, challenge of feeding an exponentially growing population,
and so on. The human population is now so large that the amount of resources
needed to sustain it exceeds what is available. Humanity’s environmental demand
is much more that the earth’s biological capacity. This implies that we are
living way beyond our means, consuming much more than what the earth can
sustain.
To draw
the attention of the world to these aspects and in an attempt to establish that
environment is where we live; and development is what we all do in attempting
to improve our lot, within that abode, the United Nations has declared the year
2008 as “The Year of the Planet Earth”. It is hoped that with the cooperation
of all we shall be able to save the biodiversity and the life on this planet. A
host of activities and programmes are being organized all over the world for
this purpose. One of the important aspects is to make people aware about the challenges
we face and the possible solutions to save this planet from heading towards
catastrophe. It is with such thoughts that Vigyan Prasar has initiated
programmes with activities built around the theme “The Planet Earth”. The
activities comprise of development and production of a series of informative
booklets, radio and television programmes, and CD-ROMs; and training of
resource persons in the country in collaboration with other agencies and
organizations.
It is expected that the present series of publications on the theme “The Planet Earth” would be welcomed by science communicators, science clubs, resource persons, and individuals; and inspire them initiate actions to save this fragile abode of ours.
Preface
I started
walking with a bamboo handled walker when I was nine-month old. Since then my
learning with bamboo has been continuing till today. In 1993, I began my
research career as Research Assistant with Dr. K. Haridasan a renowned Botanist
of State Forest Research Institute, Itanagar, Arunachal Pradesh after
completing my postgraduate studies. During that time we made extensive field
visits to some biodiversity hotspot areas of the state which helped me to
realise the depth of relationship between bamboo and ethnic tribes.
Bamboo is
the most important forest produce used by the rural communities in several
countries of the Asia-Pacific region. It is also an important source of cash
income for the rural poor. In Asia, the history of bamboo is so inextricably
interwoven with the history of man that it could be characterized as a bamboo
civilization. Since the commodity is multipurpose and processing is
labour-intensive, bamboo-based development leads to the creation of new
employment opportunities and income generation, especially in rural communities
and expansion of opportunities for women in the work force.
The north
eastern region of India is rich in diversity of bamboo. Bamboo popularly called
as poor man’s timber is also integral to the life and culture of all the ethnic
groups of this region. Its uses for house construction, cottage industry,
household articles, utensils, agricultural implements and tools, fodder,
medicine and even food has made it an indispensable article for the rural
people. Being interwoven with the daily life of the ethnic groups of this
region, bamboo has also been incorporated in their folk songs, folklores and
even in several festivals and social occasions. Continued technological
advancement and researches on the other hand have put bamboo into more and more
ways of uses and as raw materials in several industries. There is a need to
propagate information to the people of various walks in bamboo sector.
I
sincerely hope that this book will be useful to those people who are interested
in bamboos. I will be happy to receive criticisms and suggestions from the
readers of this book.
I wish to record my appreciation and thanks to Vigyan Prasar particularly Dr. B.K. Tyagi, Scientist-D for giving me the responsibility to bring out this book as part of the programme ‘Year of Planet Earth - 2008’. I grateful to Dr. A.K. Baruwa, Director of Assam Science Technology and Environment Council, Guwahati for providing necessary facilities and thankful to Sri Jaideep Baruah, Scientific Officer & Head i/c, Environment Division of the Council for his constant support. I am also thankful to Dr. R.N. Bhattacharjee, Retd. Prof. & Head, Dept. of Botany Cotton College for his valuable suggestions & encouragement.
Introduction
The
importance of bamboos has increased many-folds during the last few decades as
an important source of raw material for varied end-uses. Besides being
important as a raw material in a number of industries, bamboos are also used in
a myriad ways by the rural people and are interwoven with their life style in
many parts of India and in Asia also. India is reported to have a great variety
of bamboos with perhaps the world’s largest reserves. North eastern India
comprising the states of Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram,
Nagaland and Tripura including Sikkim, West Bengal (North) has not only over
68% of bamboo species reported to occur in India but also considered to be the
potential area in the country as far as bamboo resources are concerned.
The
bamboo called “poor man’s timber”, is one of the most important forestry
species having wide distribution throughout the country and has major
contribution to the rural economy of India. Of about 1250 species under 75
genera distributed throughout the world, bamboo in India is represented by 129
species belonging to 18 genera while the north eastern India represents 89
species belonging to 16 genera. Bamboo forests in India occupy an extent of
approximately 10.03 million hectares, which constitutes almost 12.8% of the
total forest area of the country. About 28% of the total bamboo area of the
country is located in North-east India. The bamboo genera occurring in
North-East India are Arundinaria, Bambusa, Chimonobambusa, Dendrocalamus,
Dinochloa, Gigantochloa, Melocanna, Oxytenanthera, Phyllostachys, Pleioblastus,
Pseudosasa, Racemobambos, Schizostachyum, Sinarundinaria, Thamnocalamus and
Thyrsostachys. The distribution of species and the quantity of bamboos,
however, is uneven and more than 68% of the bamboo species and 66% of growing
stock out of about 80.42 million tonnes occurs in North-east India. There are
about 1500 documented applications of bamboos, of which major ones include use
in building materials, agricultural implements, furniture, musical instruments,
food items, handicrafts, large bamboo based industries for paper pulp, rayon
etc. and packaging materials.
Bamboos
are specific as far as their properties and uses are concerned. Although taken
as a whole, they are a versatile material, not many of them could be classified
as multipurpose bamboos and also a majority of them cannot be specifically used
for a given single purpose. The selection of bamboos for specific needs,
therefore, is of paramount importance for their better and efficient
utilisation for sustainable development, which in turn necessitates better
knowledge of bamboos before they could be subjected to experimentation or fed
to the industry.
History
of bamboo study-The first mention of bamboo
is found in works of Ctesius, in a letter from Alexander the Great to Aristotle
and in the Natural History of Pliny. However, the earliest attempts at
describing bamboos appear to be by Rumphius who described and named some
bamboos in his publication entitled Herbarium Amboinense. In the first edition
of Species Plantarum by Linnaeus, only one species is mentioned under the name
Arundo bambos, now referable to Bambusa bambos. It was in the year 1789 that
the first bamboo genus was scientifically described under the name Bambos on
the basis of a single species Bambos arundinacea, now known as Bambusa bambos.
Later on in the same year Schreber (1789) proposed the generic name Bambusa
without citation of any species representing the type of the genus but with the
generic name Bambos published by Retzius (1789) as its synonym. More than four
decades later Blanco (1837) briefly described some bamboos of Philippines under
the name Bambusa. Based on studies of herbarium specimens Ruprecht (1839)
published a monograph on bamboos where he described altogether 18 species from
the Indo-Malayan region.
Kurz
(1876) who worked on living specimens from botanical gardens of Bogor
(Indonesia) and Calcutta realised the importance of vegetative characters like
culm-sheath in the taxonomic study of bamboos and pointed out the usefulness of
vegetative characters of bamboos in their identification. Later on researches
in different countries took up studies on different aspects of bamboos to find
out a solution to the identification of bamboos. These include vascular anatomy
of leaf-sheath (Porterfield 1923), culm-sheath (Chatterji & Raizada 1963),
morphology and anatomy of culms (Pattanath 1965), anatomy of the culms
(Shingenmatsu 1958; Ghosh & Negi 1960, Pattanath & Rao 1969; Grosser
& Liese 1971, 1973; Grosser & Zamuco 1971; Kitamura et al 1974; Wen
Taihui & Chou Wen Wai 1987), leaf characteristics (Metcalfe 1956; Fujimoto
1966), culm-bud and bud-sheath (Bahadur 1979), epidermal features (Sharma et
a/1986, 1987; Chauhan et a11988; Bissen et a11988; Agrawal & Chauhan 1991,
1992) and cytological studies (Richaria & Kotwal1940; Parthasarathy 1946;
Janaki Amal 1959; Zhang Guang-Zhu 1987).
McClure
(1966) made an extensive coverage of vegetative and reproductive
characteristics of the bamboo plant, including description of elite species
with their propagation methods, flowering and fruiting behaviour and taxonomic
keys to various genera and species. Ohrnberger & Goerrings (1985) have made
a tentative list of bamboos known in different parts of the world along with
their geographical distribution and published literature on each species. The
work is not a taxonomic revision but a bibliographic treatment without
herbarium and field research.
In India
the first systematic study on bamboos was initiated by Von Rheede, Dutch
Governor of Malabar, who in his Hortus Malabaricus in 1678 described and
illustrated two kinds of bamboos, which are now known as Bambusa bambos and
Ochlandra scriptoria (Chatterji & Raizada 1963; Bahadur 1979). In 1814,
Willium Roxburgh, the father of Indian Botany, in his Hortus Bengalensis
enumerated seven species under the name Bambusa arundinacea, B. striata, B.
tulda, B. balcooa, B. baccifera, B. spinosa and B. nana. Munro’s Monograph of
Bambusaceae (1868) is the foundation of our modern knowledge of bamboos where
he enumerated 220 species with description of 170 species under 20 genera of
bamboos of the world and classified them under three divisions. Munro’s (1868)
work includes 70 species of bamboo from Indo-Malayan region. Beddome’s Flora
Sylvatica (1873) dealt with 18 South Indian bamboos. Many of the species of
bamboos found in India are also dealt with by Kurz (1877) in his Forest Flora
of British Burma where he described 30 species.
The
monumental work of Gamble-Bambuseae of British India (1896) enumerates 15
genera and 115 species occurring in India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh,
Myanmar and Malaya. This was followed by Camus (1913), who described the
bamboos of India and China. A systematic analysis of species was attempted by
Parker (1929) and Blatter (1929). Blatter (1929) has tried to stabilise the
systematic position of some of the Indian bamboos and has discussed the
confusion between some closely related species, besides providing amplified descriptions
of species, where necessary. The work of Blatter (1929) includes 24 new species
recorded from India since the publication of Gamble (1896). Other important
publication on bamboo taxonomy are that of McClure (1936, 1954, 1966),
Dransfield (1980, 1982), Soderstrom (1985), Widjaja (1987), Soderstrom &
Ellis (1988),Chao & Renvoize (1989), Bennet & Caur (1990b), Tewari
(1992), Kumar (1990, 1995), Negi & Naithani (1994), Dransfield &
Widjaja (1995) and Seethalakshmi & Kumar (1998).
The work
of Bennet & Gaur (1990b) includes description of vegetative characters,
habit and habitat, distribution, flowering and uses of 37 bamboos growing in
India. The coloured illustrations provided by Bennet & Gaur (1990b) are an
additional feature, which are helpful for field identification. The work of
Tewari (1992) is the first comprehensive work on Indian bamboos after
independence. He described 128 species under 23 genera with illustrations of 55
species. For each species a systematic description, distribution, flowering and
uses are provided separately and information on other aspects like genetics,
silviculture, growth, economics, pests and diseases, properties and utilisation
are compiled under various chapters. The work of Negi & Naithani (1994)
includes useful information on the vernacular names, description, distribution,
phenology, silviculture, management and utilisation of important bamboos of
India in a concise form. There is also a write up on the rare and threatened
bamboos of India. The latest comprehensive work on Indian bamboos is by
Seethalakshmi & Kumar (1998). This is a compilation work primarily based on
literature survey and includes information on 128 bamboo species belonging to
18 genera. It also includes illustrations of 113 species, which are either
prepared from live and herbarium specimens or redrawn from earlier
publications. For each species nomenclature, description, flowering and
fruiting, distribution and ecology, anatomy, morphology and fibre
characteristics, chemistry, silviculture and management, pests and diseases,
physical and mechanical properties, natural durability and preservation and
uses are provided.
The
publications of Varmah & Bahadur (1980), Gaur (1987), Thomas et al (1987)
and Sharma (1987) on bamboo resources and researches have helped to arrive at
an overall picture of bamboos in India and met the major information gaps that
existed. A lucid historical account on bamboo taxonomy has been dealt with by
Bedell (1997) while Bahadur & [ain (1981, 1983) dealt with rare and endangered
bamboos of India.
There is
no work on systematic study of bamboos of north eastern India as such. Bor
(1940) described 50 species under 16 genera in his work on Grasses of Assam.
Haridasan et al (1987) recorded the occurrence of 42 species with their
distribution from Arunachal Pradesh. Biswas (1988) discussed in detail about
the distributional pattern of bamboos in northeastern India. Shukla (1996)
described 84 species under 15 genera of bamboos from this region. Majumdar
(1989) has provided an enumeration of Indian bamboos while nomenclatural aspect
have been studied by a number of researchers (Bahadur & Naithani 1976,1983;
Naithani 1986, 1990a, 1990b, 1991, 1993,1994; Bennet 1988, 1989; Bennet &
Caur 1990a, 1990b; Naithani & Bennet 1991 and Soderstrom & Ellis 1988).
C. Barooah and S.K. Borthakur (2003) carried out an extensive study on bamboos in Assam and recorded 40 species including one variety and one forma belonging to 10 genera of indigenous and exotic bamboos. The book Diversity and Distribution of Bamboos in Assam deals detail accounts of systematic circumscription of bamboos, historical perspective, global distributional pattern and uses of bamboos have dealt with. The book is profusely illustrated with three maps, 42 line drawings and 47 coloured photographs.
Contents
Foreword |
vii |
|
Preface |
xi |
|
1. |
Introduction |
1 |
2. |
Bamboo as a Part of Culture in the Northeast |
42 |
3. |
Bamboo in the Economy of Northeast India |
55 |
4. |
Bamboo and Its Impact on the Environment |
59 |
5. |
Special Initiatives and Efforts on Part of in North-Eastern Region Govt. of India |
70 |
6. |
Bamboos Having Industrial Application and Their Uses |
78 |
7. |
Cultivation of Bamboo |
128 |
8. |
Some Institutes, Agencies Working on Bamboos |
140 |
Glossary |
142 |
|
References |
160 |
|
Index |
179 |


Item Code:
NAJ380
Author:
C. Barooah
Cover:
Paperback
Edition:
2009
Publisher:
Vigyan Prasar
ISBN:
9788174801906
Language:
English
Size:
8.5 inch X 5.5 inch
Pages:
190 (42 Color and 18 B/W Illustrations)
Other Details:
Weight of the Book: 300 gms
Price: $16.00 Shipping Free |
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