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Auroville Botanical Gardens: SOUTH INDIA Restoring the TDEF through Community Participation
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Auroville is an international community of 1700 people from over 30 different countries living together with the ideal of creating Human Unity. It began in 1968.
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In the early days it was a hot, sandy, treeless plateau.
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The first settlements began. Aspiration Community 1971
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The initial priority was to create an environment to live in, to plant trees.
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Auroville’s first tree nursery 1971
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20 years later
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The barren plateau has been transformed into an emerging ecosystem
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In the regenerating environment remnants of old forests began to emerge, and this led to further investigation of the surrounding areas.
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Small remnants were discovered on land that was unfit for agriculture.
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As well as former residents.
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Research showed that the Ecosystem was known as the Tropical Dry Evergreen Forest, and that it was unique to a narrow strip of the Coromandel coast of Tamil Nadu – It became apparent that it is one of the most endangered forest types in India with only a few hundred acres of undisturbed vegetation left.
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Original Range of the Tropical Dry Evergreen Forest
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Presently a team from the Auroville is involved in a project funded by the EU to restore this Tropical Dry Evergreen Forest; in a thousand acres of the Auroville Green belt sanctuaries and throughout the Bioregion in Government Reserve forests and on village common lands.
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Sacred Groves are the best remaining Gene banks of the TDEF. The best remnants are found in sacred groves often only a few acres in size
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Over the last decade Auroville botanists have continually surveyed the remnant forests and sacred groves of the region. Collecting seeds as they go.
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Which are processed and grown on in nurseries for afforestation programs.
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Auroville nurseries have mastered the propagation techniques of more than 200 indigenous species
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Kaluveli Bio Region As we discovered the vegetation we also began to understand the interrelated area we call the Kaluveli Bioregion that Auroville is part of.
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Around the wetlands the communities are predominantly farmers following the rhythms of the seasons.
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Skills and technologies abound using the Bio resources of the region to live and work with nature.
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Over the last decades working with the villagers we have documented the skills, technologies and cultural practices of the communities of the bioregion.
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In particular through working with more than 300 traditional healers we have collected the local knowledge about medicinal plants.
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400 plants are still used by the people as medicine
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Vandipalayam Green Center (VGC) Within the target area we have set up Green Resource Centers
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These centers serve as dispensaries for Traditional Medicines
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Re-establishing the link of the communities to the benefits of the forest
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As centers for community based activities such as women’s groups
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For environmentally based programs with local children
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We are developing alternative field crops with the local farmers
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Local communities are now getting involved in planning processes.
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As well as working with policy makers and village authorities we work with the women and children in exercises of village resource mapping.
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So that when we finally plant the trees they have the full community’s support behind them
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Auroville Botanical Gardens: Conserving Diversity
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