Punjab Governor VP Singh Badnore will virtually inaugurate a unique environmental landmark in Chandigarh -- the Museum of Trees - to commemorate the 551st birth anniversary celebrations of first Sikh master, Guru Nanak Dev, on November 30.
Conceived and curated by former IAS officer and author DS Jaspal, the Museum of Trees nessled near the Chandigarh Railway Station comprises a sacred grove created out of genetic clones of 12 sacred trees associated with the Sikh religion.
The naming of sacred Sikh shrines after trees is unique to the religion. As many as 59 Sikh shrines are named after 19 such trees.
The project, first-of-its kind in the world, has been funded by the Ministry of Culture and promoted by the Chandigarh Nature and Health Society, a registered NGO.
It is India's only outdoor walk-through museum where visitors can see replicas of different trees considered sacred by the Sikh community.
Alongside each tree eight-foot high panels have been set up, carrying a picture of the tree, along with a description of its botanical features as well as the association between it and historical and religious shrine it is associated with.
To preserve and propagate the surviving sacred trees within various gurdwaras by reproducing true genotypes of the parent trees, the museum has successfully reproduced genetic replicas of 12 sacred trees -- including at 'Dukh Bhanjani' ber (jujube) tree at the Golden Temple in Amritsar; the 'ber' tree at Gurdwara Ber Sahib, Sultanpur Lodhi; and 'ber' tree at Gurdwara Babe-di-Ber, Sialkot, Pakistan.
A new study has revealed that trees are losing their leaves, or reaching senescence, early because of climate change. This is in contrast to the earlier assumption that suggested that as the planet keeps heating up, the growing season will last longer and the autumn season will come later.
Previous beliefs had suggested that the prolonged growing season would mean that the autumn will get delayed and warmer in the upcoming years. But the recent study published in the journal Science contradicts this belief.
(With inputs from IANS)