Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest

by WeForest
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Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest
Grow 30,000 trees to restore India's cloud forest

Project Report | Mar 3, 2020
Biodiversity in the Khasi Hills

By Louise Tideman | Sponsorship Officer

Your support for the Khasi Hills is contributing to:

Biodiversity

In 2019, 45tree species were planted across the restoration sites. This diversity contributes to the restoration of the original forest diversity of this area to support biodiversity and include tree species such as the Ilex khasiana: shrub endemic to the Khasi Hills and critically endangered as its natural habitat has declined in extent and quality the Quercus glauca: also known as the ring-cupped oak, its acorns are edible, and it is used locally for fuel, fodder and as a medicine for dysentery and Cinnamomum camphera: vulnerable evergreen tree commonly known as camphor laurel and used as a source of leaf oil and natural linalool.

The region is classified as a global biodiversity hot spot under the Eastern Himalayan Endemic Bird Area. With such high rainfall it’s home to a wide range of amphibians some of which are endemic like the endangered Khasi Hill toad and the critically threatened Shillong bush frog.

Landscape transformation

300ha were brought under conservation management in 2019, bringing the overall total to 2,800ha – an area equivalent to 3,360 football pitches!

Community Engagement

75 villages are currently engaged in this project which addresses the key link between poverty and forest degradation.

Carbon sequestration

Over the next 20 years we expect to have sequestered around 476,000 tCO2 through the areas under restoration, assuming disasters such as droughts or fires do not impact the sites.

Thank you for all your support!

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Dec 3, 2019
An inclusive project

By Charlotte Van Campenhout | Writer at WeForest

Sep 6, 2019
Pickling Pears

By Manon Koningstein | Chief Marketing and Communications Officer

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Organization Information

WeForest

Location: Brussels - Belgium
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @WeForest_org
Project Leader:
Louise Tideman
Overijse , Belgium

Funded Project!

Combined with other sources of funding, this project raised enough money to fund the outlined activities and is no longer accepting donations.
   

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