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Changa Manga

The Changa Manga (Urdu, Punjabi: چھانگا مانگا) is a planted forest which includes a wildlife preserve, in the Kasur and Lahore districts of Punjab, Pakistan. It is located approximately 80 kilometers south-west of Lahore. It was once the largest man-made forest in the world but has undergone illegal deforestation at a massive scale in recent times.[2][3]

Changa Manga
Punjabi: چھانگا مانگا
Geography
LocationChunian Tehsil Kasur District and Lahore District, Punjab, Pakistan
Coordinates31°05′N 73°58′E / 31.083°N 73.967°E / 31.083; 73.967Coordinates: 31°05′N 73°58′E / 31.083°N 73.967°E / 31.083; 73.967
Area5,065 hectares (12,515 acres)[1]
Administration
Established1866
Governing bodyPunjab Forest Department,
Government of Punjab, Pakistan
Ecology
WWF ClassificationIndomalayan realm
Indicator plantsDalbergia sissoo (Sheesham), Acacia nilotica (Kikar), Morus alba (White mulberry), Bombax ceiba (Simal).
Fauna14 mammalian species (including hog deer, jackal, mouflon, nilgai and wild boar), 50 birds (including Indian peafowl, Gyps bengalensis and other Asiatic vultures), six reptiles, two amphibians and 27 insect species.

Changa Manga is known more widely as "one of the oldest hand-planted forests in the world",[4] and hosts a wide variety of flora and fauna. The forest is home to 14 species of mammals, 50 species of birds, six species of reptiles, two species of amphibians and 27 species of insects.[citation needed] Thus, other than producing timber for the local industry, the forest also serves as an important wildlife reserve.

Named after two brother dacoits, the Changa Manga forest was originally planted in 1866 by British foresters. Its trees were harvested to gather fuel and resources for the engines employed in the North-Western railway networks.

Onomatology of name

The name of the forest is derived from an amalgamation of the names of two brother dacoits (bandits), Changa and Manga. The dacoits were a constant source of terror for the "law-abiding citizens" of the districts in the 19th century as they would "hold up and plunder" any passing trader.[5] The robbers had a den in the "secret heart" of the forest where they sought shelter from the British peacekeepers.[5][6] The robbers were eventually captured by the police and became the inspiration for the name of the forest site.[7] Soon afterwards, Salvation Army opened up a camp at the forest site as a place for reformation of criminals.[5]

Location

 
Map of Changa Manga Forest

The Changa Manga forest can be entered from a road off the N-5 Highway near Bhai Pheru and Chunian. At present, the forest covers an area of 48.6 square kilometres (12,000 acres).[8] It was once the largest man-made forest in the world but massive deforestation has reduced it to less than half its original size.[2] It is also known as "one of the oldest hand-planted forests in the world".[4]

The forest plantation dates back to 1866 and was planned to fill the need for timber and fuel resources for the North-Western railway networks. The most common species of flora are Dalbergia sissoo (Sheesham) and Acacia nilotica (Kikar), both members of the Fabaceae and native to the Indian subcontinent. Morus alba (white mulberry) was also introduced to the plantation and became popular in cultivation throughout South Asia. The forest also has several species of Eucalyptus and Populus.[9]

History

Allocation of land

 
Throughout the Punjab plains, the dry scrubs and thorn forests were slashed and burnt to make way for an irrigated plain on which to cultivate the forest plantations.

In 1864, the North-Western Railway found itself starved of resources, vital in running services on its network. It was then that Dr John Lindsay Stewart, the first Conservator of Forests of Punjab, recommended the allocation of a block of land for each railway district where forest plantations should be cultivated to cater for such growing demands.[10] Such a block of land was allocated for the Kasur district at the Chunian tehsil on the Lahore-Karachi railway line. This land was allocated on the assumption that 4850 cubic feet per acre of mature crop on a 15-year rotation would adequately suffice the five trains running daily on these lines, consuming 80 pounds (36 kg) of fuel per train.[10]

This particular area of land was a semi-desert scrub jungle with thorn forest land and a light alluvial soil that only required the introduction of water to yield crops. The land was mostly populated by the Gondhal and Sansi gypsies, whom British called "junglies" (a derogatory term meaning 'jungle-dwelling barbarians'). The British replaced the population of the Gondhals and Sansis with an influx of cultivators from older cultivated lands and other provinces.[11]

In preparation for cultivation, the land was slashed and burnt to rid the landscape of thorn forest and dry scrub growth. The unruly scrubs of the dry jungles were gradually turned into plains ready for irrigation.

Initial plantation

Within the premises of the allocated land, the German forester Berthold Ribbentrop, Inspector General of Forests in British India, identified a dry forest area where long rooted bar trees could exist.[12] He planned to cultivate the land with the plantation of Morus alba (white mulberry) and Dalbergia sissoo (sheesham).[13] The plantation of the forest began in 1866 but failed to obtain substantial harvest from the initial wooded area of 8,400 acres (3,399 ha).[12]

In 1868, Charles Frederick Amery, an officer in the Indian Forestry Commission, had an idea of employing a trench and ridge system. Ribbentrop adopted the system making the plantation a "sylvicultural and financial success".[14] The plantation reaped its first successful harvest in 1888 from a second crop rotation.[14] The site was soon identified as a sustainable source for timber, primarily serving the North-Western railway network.

Railway and logistics

By 1870, the irrigated plantation had grown to 9,129 acres (3,694 ha) and was served by the primary railway station for the Chunian tehsil on the Lahore-Karachi railway line.[15] To benefit logistics for logging operations, it was decided to build a railway station at Changa Manga. A special 610 millimetres (2.00 ft) gauge railway, called the Changa Manga Forestry Railway, was established for narrow gauge logging operations.

The railway employed the use of wood-burning steam locomotives built by John Fowler & Co., of Leeds. When burning wood from an engine set fire to a van and buggy, the locomotives were upgraded to coal-powered types. Even with such incidents, the demand for wood from Changa Manga remained steady as its supply base grew across the timber market in India.[8]

The railway is still operational today and is only used to either transport timber or haul tourists on special occasions. Amongst the three engines, operational to date, are two from John Fowler & Co. and one from Andrew Barclay Sons & Co. of Kilmarnock, Scotland.[8]

Great Indian Famine of 1876–78

The years 1876–78 saw intense drought sweep across much of India, and in particular the Deccan Plateau. The famine was a result of crop failures throughout the plateau.[16] The failure to provide food to the millions of hungry countrymen during the famine was blamed primarily on the absence of adequate rail infrastructure[17] and thus the British administration sought to expand its rail infrastructure. Though some parts of Punjab were also affected by the famine, firewood from Changa Manga grew in demand to supply the growing network of rail infrastructure.

Salvation Army Silk Camp

The early 1800s saw many Indian traders invest in the silk trade. Most of the silk in India came from silkworms cultivated at Moradabad near Delhi. However, businessmen deemed the Delhi silk as "lacking lustre" and they ventured into silk experiments elsewhere across the country.[18] One such silk experiment was conducted by Commissioner Frederick Booth-Tucker of The Salvation Army at Changa Manga in 1912.[7] It came to be known as the Salvation Army Silk Camp.[19]

Booth-Tucker brought along hundred ounces of silkworm eggs (about 3 million eggs) from France.[5] To house the worms, he created long sheds from bamboo and dried grass. The worms' feed consisted entirely of mulberry leaves obtained from felled trees in the forest. The worms fed on 70 hundredweights of leaves a day.[7]

In 1916, the Governor of Punjab Sir Michael O'Dwyer visited the silk experiment where the silkworms had started developing cocoons.[20] The governor left pleased with Booth-Tucker's work.[21] The Salvation Army Silk Camp remained a sustainable venture for a year after the governor's visit, although changes to the climate later led to its decline.[22]

Wildlife conservation and breeding

 
Changa Manga has a conservation centre for the Gyps bengalensis (white-rumped vultures) which are a critically endangered species of Asiatic vultures.

The forest serves as a conservation and breeding centre for the critically endangered species of Asiatic vultures, Gyps bengalensis (white-rumped vultures). It hosts a conservation centre in association with WWF SAVE (Saving Asia's Vultures from Extinction) programme, an international effort across India, Nepal and Pakistan.[23] The Asiatic vulture species of G. bengalensis and G. indicus have reportedly seen a decline by "more than 90 per cent in Pakistan, India and Nepal",[24] thereby making the conservation efforts at Changa Manga extremely crucial for the survival of these vulture species.

Gyps Vulture Conservation Centre

There is a Vulture Conservation Centre in a secluded area of the Changa Manga forest. The centre has been specifically designed to manage the population of G. bengalensis.[25] The centre operates the Gyps Vulture Restoration Programme under the management of WWF Pakistan and the Punjab Wildlife and Parks Department,[26] with aid of the Environment Agency Abu Dhabi, Hawk Conservancy Trust[27] and WWF USA. The vulture conservation programme was first realised in 2004 and this dedicated conservation centre became fully operational in 2007.[27]

The centre holds up to fifteen G. benalgensis in its communal aviary, but has a capacity to hold 30 vultures in its four separate breeding aviaries. The communal aviary is 38m long and increases in width from 14m to 27.5m. The aviary contains live tree perches with roosting and nesting ledges, which also provides shade and shelter for birds.[25]

Wildlife reserve

Changa Manga also has a wildlife reserve that covers an area of 40 acres (16 ha), built in 2008. The reserve is home to species of hog deer, Indian peafowl, golden jackal, mouflon, nilgai and wild boar.[28] The Changa Manga wildlife preserve is one of the three wildlife parks located in the Lahore Division, other two being Jallo Wildlife Park and Lahore Zoo Safari.

Recreation

Parts of the forest have now been developed into a recreation park with a railroad that gives the visitor a 5-kilometre (3.1 mi) ride on a miniature train through the forest. Other attractions include a water turbine, a waterfall, a children's play area, and a lake called 'Lunar Lake', where boating is possible. Changa Manga Tourist Resort is situated 45 kilometres (28 mi) from Lahore city. The Tourism Development Corporation of Punjab (TDCP) arranges picnic trips to Changa Manga throughout the year.[29]

Deforestation

The world's largest artificial forest is being heavily logged, and so far more than 60 percent of Changa Manga Wildlife Park has been deforested.[30]

Revival of Changa Manga Forest

On 11 November 2011, Khan Waqas A. Khan broke the story of rapid deforestation in Changa Mhanga Forest and exposed how unbridled wood mafia with the forest officials are rapidly deforesting the world's largest man-made forest. The Chief Ombudsman, Punjabi, Javed Mehboob took a suo moto notice to probe the case and report accordingly. A series of news stories were then filed by Khan until 24 June 2012, when CM Punjab Mian Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif, taking notice of the situation, ordered the removal of Chief Conservator (Forest) Dr Mehboobur Rehman and Conservator (Forest) Rao Khalid from their posts and making them OSD.[citation needed]

The chief minister also ordered the Punjab Anti-Corruption Establishment DG and the CM Inspection Team (CMIT) chairman to carry out a joint investigation into the deforestation by timber mafia and ferret out facts about their possible links with the forest authorities. The CM also ordered to begin from terrorist Pakistan investigation into the issue from 1990 onward. The team had been directed to investigate all the DFOs, posted at Changa Manga since 1990. Similarly the team had been directed to investigates all SDOYs, Block Officers and Forest Guards who have been working there since then and the culprits were then arrested and reported to police.

Howevers, all of them got bail from the courts, were evicted from charges or received minor penalties. The Ombudsman issued a detailed report on the case affixing para wise responsibilities on those who were responsible for the worst affairs and CMIT proceeded for criminalized proceedings for the sake, but everything went under they blanket and now almost all of the accused are workington on the similar posts as ADHOC.

The pulpits was to appoint them on these same posts as contract/daily wage/ ad hoc employees while they are still OSD, dismissed form service unofficially. Apart from this, however serious efforts the government somehow started to bring back Changa Manga to the listed of worlds 's largest artificially forests.

Change Manganese Forester was then safely be termed as back to track. Water scarcity was the first reason of plant disease and failure. The forest administration negotiated with the irritating department and took fullest sanctioned discharge of 113 cusecs for the forest for all seasons. This step alone brought very positive results and the forest grew greenhouse again.

Illegal animals were another source of forest destruction. There were mafias that used to use this Forester as the grazing safari and hence all new plantation failed because of abundant illegal grazing. 864 Animals in this period were ejected from the forest on self-help basis as legislation for the same is still pending although a summary has been approved by the CM in this regard already.

To tackle the political and social mafias, the current administration kept a close liaison with the Chunian Cantt authorities who deployed army patrolling teams in the forest to help forest staff control the damage, illicit grazing and snubbing of notoriously habitual offenders.

Two row boundary planting of large sized plants along the 39 km foundry of the plantation including improvement of boundary road for patrolling has been completed. Barbed wire fencing of 30 km along with the RCC posts on the boundary of the forest to check illegal movement has been completed. Planting of 9 km large sized fundamental plants along tram line for aesthetic view of the visitors has been completed. Construction of main gates on the boundary of plantation to stop illegal movement has been completed. Reconstruction of boundary wall with iron grill around forest park to secure 5000 Rft park area and 7050 Rft on the Wankhara side has been completed as well .

Additionally, afforestation of new plants were done in 1500 acre blank area. It is pertinent to mention that an additional 4000 acres is still pending afforestation that is respected to be started by next year. However, 150000 poplar plants have been recently planted on the road sides to give the forest a better look. In the same period 52 FIRs have been registered, however most of them are still pending investigation as the accused are, either themselves or family members of, prominent political figures of area including Ch Mehmood Anwar and Rana Muhammad Ishaq Khan blending to ruling party of Punjab.

Changa Manga has long been waiting for all this. Now when things are back on track; it shall be expected that the authorities will not turn a blind eye towards affairs and will help forest administration in preventing culprits from further destroying the forest. Similarly, it is also recommended that encouragement rewards may be given to the current administration for doing honest efforts to save the forest.[31]

According to Forest Department officials in April 2020, honey sales from Changa Manga wildlife preserve increased from Rs. 729,000 in the 2016-17 financial year to Rs. 1.3 million in the 2019-2020 financial year. This is asserted to be due to increased honeybee presence at the preserve as a result of Billion Tree Project afforestation efforts and decreased use of pesticides and industrial fertilizers in the vicinity of the region.[32]

See also

References

  1. ^ Abidi, Ali; Ifrah, Syeda; Noor, Junaid (13 February 2014). "Economic Analysis of Forest Management in Pakistan – A Case Study of Changa Mange and Muree Forest" (PDF). Munich Personal RePEc Archive. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
  2. ^ a b Sameer (6 January 2015). "The Changa Manga". Pakistan Insider. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  3. ^ Jalil, Xarvi (14 December 2011). "Forest land transfers, deforestation spiral out of control". Pakistan Today. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  4. ^ a b Singh et al. (2008, p. 121)
  5. ^ a b c d Barnett (1936, p. 205)
  6. ^ Indian Forest Ranger College (1946, p. 61)
  7. ^ a b c Smith (1945, p. 10)
  8. ^ a b c Mughal, Owais (21 October 2007). . All Things Pakistan. Archived from the original on 4 July 2008. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
  9. ^ . rrcap.unep.org. Archived from the original on 12 January 2012. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
  10. ^ a b Gorrie (1924, p. 246)
  11. ^ Gorrie (1924, p. 244)
  12. ^ a b Ribbentrop (1898, p. 156)
  13. ^ D'Arcy (1887)
  14. ^ a b Ribbentrop (1898, p. 157)
  15. ^ Government of Punjab (1916, p. 152)
  16. ^ Roy (2006, p. 361)
  17. ^ Davis (2001, pp. 26–27)
  18. ^ Lala (2006, p. 57)
  19. ^ Royal Society of Arts (1916, p. 698)
  20. ^ Ceylon Agricultural Society (1916, p. 257)
  21. ^ Smith (1945, p. 11)
  22. ^ Maxwell-Lefroy (1917, p. 58)
  23. ^ "International Vulture Programme". The Hawk Conservancy Trust. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  24. ^ "WWF project preserving endangered vulture species". The Express Tribune. 5 September 2013. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  25. ^ a b Khan, Uzma; Murn, Campbell (2011). "Gyps Vulture Restoration Project – Role of Captive Breeding in Endangered Species Management" (PDF). The Journal of Animal and Plant Sciences. 21 (2 Suppl): 405–409. ISSN 1018-7081. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  26. ^ Murn, Campbell; Khan, Uzma; Farid, Faisal (March 2008). "Vulture populations in Pakistan and the Gyps Vulture Restoration Project" (PDF). Vulture News. 58: 35–43. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  27. ^ a b "Conservation Overseas Projects: Asian Vulture Crisis". The Hawk Conservancy Trust. Retrieved 15 August 2015.
  28. ^ Ahmed, Shoaib (9 June 2005). . Daily Times. Pakistan. Archived from the original on 14 June 2011. Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  29. ^ . tdcp.gop.pk. Tourist Development Corporation of Pakistan. Archived from the original on 31 October 2010. Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  30. ^ Khan, Waqas A (11 November 2011). "Mafia deforests 60pc of worlds largest park". The Nation. Pakistan: Daily The Nation. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  31. ^ Khan, Waqas A (31 March 2015). "Restoration of Changa Manga Forest on the cards". The Nation. Pakistan: Daily The Nation. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  32. ^ "Billion Tree Project: Honey production rises by 70%". The Express Tribune. 20 April 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2020.

References

  • Ribbentrop, Berthold (1898). Rawat, Ajay (ed.). Forestry in British India. Indus Publishing. ISBN 8185182248.
  • Government of Punjab (1916). Punjab District Gazetteers. Punjab District and State Gazetteers. Muzaffarnagar District, India: Superintendent Government Printing.
  • Smith, H. Pimm (1945). Capturing Crims for Christ (PDF). Challenge Series. Salvationist Publishing & Supplies.
  • Lala, R.M. (2006). For the Love of India: The Life and Times of Jamsetji Tata. Portfolio. New Delhi, India: Penguin Group. ISBN 9780143062066.
  • D'Arcy, W.E. (1887). Working-plan of the Changa Manga Plantation. Lahore District, Punjab, India: Government Central Press.
  • Ceylon Agricultural Society (1916). "Salvation Army Silk Camp in Changa Manga Mulberry Forest". Indian Forester. 42 (6): 323–324.
  • Maxwell-Lefroy, Harold (1917). Ansorge, Eric Cecil (ed.). The Silk Industry. India: Superintendent Government Printing.
  • Singh, Sarina; Brown, Lindsay; Clammer, Paul; Cocks, Rodney (2008). Pakistan and the Karakoram Highway. Country Guide Series. Lonely Planet. ISBN 9781741045420.
  • Indian Forest Ranger College (1946). The Indian Forest Rangers College Annual. Dehra Dun, India.
  • Barnett, Alfred H. (1936). "The Salvation Army in India". Journal of the Royal Society of Arts. Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce. 85 (4391): 202–215. JSTOR 41360924.
  • Gorrie, R. Maclagan (1924). "The Irrigated Plantations of the Punjab". Empire Forestry Journal. Commonwealth Forestry Association. 3 (2): 244–249. JSTOR 42594165.
  • Royal Society of Arts (1916). "A Silk Camp". Journal of the Royal Society of Arts. Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce. 64 (3327): 698. JSTOR 41347029.
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2006). The Economic History of India, 1857–1947, 2nd edition. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195684303.
  • Davis, Mike (2001), Late Victorian Holocausts: El Niño Famine and the Making of the Third World, London; New York: Verso Books, ISBN 9781859847398

External links

  • Pakistanpaedia – Changa Manga
  • (in German) Description of Changa Manga plantation

changa, manga, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, grammar, style, standardization, needed, remember, punjabi, english, please, help, improve, this, article, january, 2017, learn, when, remove, this, templat. This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is Grammar and style standardization is needed remember to use Punjabi English Please help improve this article if you can January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Changa Manga Urdu Punjabi چھانگا مانگا is a planted forest which includes a wildlife preserve in the Kasur and Lahore districts of Punjab Pakistan It is located approximately 80 kilometers south west of Lahore It was once the largest man made forest in the world but has undergone illegal deforestation at a massive scale in recent times 2 3 Changa MangaPunjabi چھانگا مانگاGeographyLocationChunian Tehsil Kasur District and Lahore District Punjab PakistanCoordinates31 05 N 73 58 E 31 083 N 73 967 E 31 083 73 967 Coordinates 31 05 N 73 58 E 31 083 N 73 967 E 31 083 73 967Area5 065 hectares 12 515 acres 1 AdministrationEstablished1866Governing bodyPunjab Forest Department Government of Punjab PakistanEcologyWWF ClassificationIndomalayan realmIndicator plantsDalbergia sissoo Sheesham Acacia nilotica Kikar Morus alba White mulberry Bombax ceiba Simal Fauna14 mammalian species including hog deer jackal mouflon nilgai and wild boar 50 birds including Indian peafowl Gyps bengalensis and other Asiatic vultures six reptiles two amphibians and 27 insect species Changa Manga is known more widely as one of the oldest hand planted forests in the world 4 and hosts a wide variety of flora and fauna The forest is home to 14 species of mammals 50 species of birds six species of reptiles two species of amphibians and 27 species of insects citation needed Thus other than producing timber for the local industry the forest also serves as an important wildlife reserve Named after two brother dacoits the Changa Manga forest was originally planted in 1866 by British foresters Its trees were harvested to gather fuel and resources for the engines employed in the North Western railway networks Contents 1 Onomatology of name 2 Location 3 History 3 1 Allocation of land 3 2 Initial plantation 3 3 Railway and logistics 3 4 Great Indian Famine of 1876 78 3 5 Salvation Army Silk Camp 4 Wildlife conservation and breeding 4 1 Gyps Vulture Conservation Centre 4 2 Wildlife reserve 5 Recreation 6 Deforestation 7 Revival of Changa Manga Forest 8 See also 9 References 10 References 11 External linksOnomatology of name EditThe name of the forest is derived from an amalgamation of the names of two brother dacoits bandits Changa and Manga The dacoits were a constant source of terror for the law abiding citizens of the districts in the 19th century as they would hold up and plunder any passing trader 5 The robbers had a den in the secret heart of the forest where they sought shelter from the British peacekeepers 5 6 The robbers were eventually captured by the police and became the inspiration for the name of the forest site 7 Soon afterwards Salvation Army opened up a camp at the forest site as a place for reformation of criminals 5 Location Edit Map of Changa Manga Forest The Changa Manga forest can be entered from a road off the N 5 Highway near Bhai Pheru and Chunian At present the forest covers an area of 48 6 square kilometres 12 000 acres 8 It was once the largest man made forest in the world but massive deforestation has reduced it to less than half its original size 2 It is also known as one of the oldest hand planted forests in the world 4 The forest plantation dates back to 1866 and was planned to fill the need for timber and fuel resources for the North Western railway networks The most common species of flora are Dalbergia sissoo Sheesham and Acacia nilotica Kikar both members of the Fabaceae and native to the Indian subcontinent Morus alba white mulberry was also introduced to the plantation and became popular in cultivation throughout South Asia The forest also has several species of Eucalyptus and Populus 9 History EditAllocation of land Edit Throughout the Punjab plains the dry scrubs and thorn forests were slashed and burnt to make way for an irrigated plain on which to cultivate the forest plantations In 1864 the North Western Railway found itself starved of resources vital in running services on its network It was then that Dr John Lindsay Stewart the first Conservator of Forests of Punjab recommended the allocation of a block of land for each railway district where forest plantations should be cultivated to cater for such growing demands 10 Such a block of land was allocated for the Kasur district at the Chunian tehsil on the Lahore Karachi railway line This land was allocated on the assumption that 4850 cubic feet per acre of mature crop on a 15 year rotation would adequately suffice the five trains running daily on these lines consuming 80 pounds 36 kg of fuel per train 10 This particular area of land was a semi desert scrub jungle with thorn forest land and a light alluvial soil that only required the introduction of water to yield crops The land was mostly populated by the Gondhal and Sansi gypsies whom British called junglies a derogatory term meaning jungle dwelling barbarians The British replaced the population of the Gondhals and Sansis with an influx of cultivators from older cultivated lands and other provinces 11 In preparation for cultivation the land was slashed and burnt to rid the landscape of thorn forest and dry scrub growth The unruly scrubs of the dry jungles were gradually turned into plains ready for irrigation Initial plantation Edit Within the premises of the allocated land the German forester Berthold Ribbentrop Inspector General of Forests in British India identified a dry forest area where long rooted bar trees could exist 12 He planned to cultivate the land with the plantation of Morus alba white mulberry and Dalbergia sissoo sheesham 13 The plantation of the forest began in 1866 but failed to obtain substantial harvest from the initial wooded area of 8 400 acres 3 399 ha 12 In 1868 Charles Frederick Amery an officer in the Indian Forestry Commission had an idea of employing a trench and ridge system Ribbentrop adopted the system making the plantation a sylvicultural and financial success 14 The plantation reaped its first successful harvest in 1888 from a second crop rotation 14 The site was soon identified as a sustainable source for timber primarily serving the North Western railway network Railway and logistics Edit See also Changa Manga railway station By 1870 the irrigated plantation had grown to 9 129 acres 3 694 ha and was served by the primary railway station for the Chunian tehsil on the Lahore Karachi railway line 15 To benefit logistics for logging operations it was decided to build a railway station at Changa Manga A special 610 millimetres 2 00 ft gauge railway called the Changa Manga Forestry Railway was established for narrow gauge logging operations The railway employed the use of wood burning steam locomotives built by John Fowler amp Co of Leeds When burning wood from an engine set fire to a van and buggy the locomotives were upgraded to coal powered types Even with such incidents the demand for wood from Changa Manga remained steady as its supply base grew across the timber market in India 8 The railway is still operational today and is only used to either transport timber or haul tourists on special occasions Amongst the three engines operational to date are two from John Fowler amp Co and one from Andrew Barclay Sons amp Co of Kilmarnock Scotland 8 Great Indian Famine of 1876 78 Edit See also Great Famine of 1876 78 and Impact of rail transport in the Great Famine The years 1876 78 saw intense drought sweep across much of India and in particular the Deccan Plateau The famine was a result of crop failures throughout the plateau 16 The failure to provide food to the millions of hungry countrymen during the famine was blamed primarily on the absence of adequate rail infrastructure 17 and thus the British administration sought to expand its rail infrastructure Though some parts of Punjab were also affected by the famine firewood from Changa Manga grew in demand to supply the growing network of rail infrastructure Salvation Army Silk Camp Edit The early 1800s saw many Indian traders invest in the silk trade Most of the silk in India came from silkworms cultivated at Moradabad near Delhi However businessmen deemed the Delhi silk as lacking lustre and they ventured into silk experiments elsewhere across the country 18 One such silk experiment was conducted by Commissioner Frederick Booth Tucker of The Salvation Army at Changa Manga in 1912 7 It came to be known as the Salvation Army Silk Camp 19 Booth Tucker brought along hundred ounces of silkworm eggs about 3 million eggs from France 5 To house the worms he created long sheds from bamboo and dried grass The worms feed consisted entirely of mulberry leaves obtained from felled trees in the forest The worms fed on 70 hundredweights of leaves a day 7 In 1916 the Governor of Punjab Sir Michael O Dwyer visited the silk experiment where the silkworms had started developing cocoons 20 The governor left pleased with Booth Tucker s work 21 The Salvation Army Silk Camp remained a sustainable venture for a year after the governor s visit although changes to the climate later led to its decline 22 Wildlife conservation and breeding Edit Changa Manga has a conservation centre for the Gyps bengalensis white rumped vultures which are a critically endangered species of Asiatic vultures The forest serves as a conservation and breeding centre for the critically endangered species of Asiatic vultures Gyps bengalensis white rumped vultures It hosts a conservation centre in association with WWF SAVE Saving Asia s Vultures from Extinction programme an international effort across India Nepal and Pakistan 23 The Asiatic vulture species of G bengalensis and G indicus have reportedly seen a decline by more than 90 per cent in Pakistan India and Nepal 24 thereby making the conservation efforts at Changa Manga extremely crucial for the survival of these vulture species Gyps Vulture Conservation Centre Edit There is a Vulture Conservation Centre in a secluded area of the Changa Manga forest The centre has been specifically designed to manage the population of G bengalensis 25 The centre operates the Gyps Vulture Restoration Programme under the management of WWF Pakistan and the Punjab Wildlife and Parks Department 26 with aid of the Environment Agency Abu Dhabi Hawk Conservancy Trust 27 and WWF USA The vulture conservation programme was first realised in 2004 and this dedicated conservation centre became fully operational in 2007 27 The centre holds up to fifteen G benalgensis in its communal aviary but has a capacity to hold 30 vultures in its four separate breeding aviaries The communal aviary is 38m long and increases in width from 14m to 27 5m The aviary contains live tree perches with roosting and nesting ledges which also provides shade and shelter for birds 25 Wildlife reserve Edit Changa Manga also has a wildlife reserve that covers an area of 40 acres 16 ha built in 2008 The reserve is home to species of hog deer Indian peafowl golden jackal mouflon nilgai and wild boar 28 The Changa Manga wildlife preserve is one of the three wildlife parks located in the Lahore Division other two being Jallo Wildlife Park and Lahore Zoo Safari Recreation EditParts of the forest have now been developed into a recreation park with a railroad that gives the visitor a 5 kilometre 3 1 mi ride on a miniature train through the forest Other attractions include a water turbine a waterfall a children s play area and a lake called Lunar Lake where boating is possible Changa Manga Tourist Resort is situated 45 kilometres 28 mi from Lahore city The Tourism Development Corporation of Punjab TDCP arranges picnic trips to Changa Manga throughout the year 29 Deforestation EditThe world s largest artificial forest is being heavily logged and so far more than 60 percent of Changa Manga Wildlife Park has been deforested 30 Revival of Changa Manga Forest EditOn 11 November 2011 Khan Waqas A Khan broke the story of rapid deforestation in Changa Mhanga Forest and exposed how unbridled wood mafia with the forest officials are rapidly deforesting the world s largest man made forest The Chief Ombudsman Punjabi Javed Mehboob took a suo moto notice to probe the case and report accordingly A series of news stories were then filed by Khan until 24 June 2012 when CM Punjab Mian Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif taking notice of the situation ordered the removal of Chief Conservator Forest Dr Mehboobur Rehman and Conservator Forest Rao Khalid from their posts and making them OSD citation needed The chief minister also ordered the Punjab Anti Corruption Establishment DG and the CM Inspection Team CMIT chairman to carry out a joint investigation into the deforestation by timber mafia and ferret out facts about their possible links with the forest authorities The CM also ordered to begin from terrorist Pakistan investigation into the issue from 1990 onward The team had been directed to investigate all the DFOs posted at Changa Manga since 1990 Similarly the team had been directed to investigates all SDOYs Block Officers and Forest Guards who have been working there since then and the culprits were then arrested and reported to police Howevers all of them got bail from the courts were evicted from charges or received minor penalties The Ombudsman issued a detailed report on the case affixing para wise responsibilities on those who were responsible for the worst affairs and CMIT proceeded for criminalized proceedings for the sake but everything went under they blanket and now almost all of the accused are workington on the similar posts as ADHOC The pulpits was to appoint them on these same posts as contract daily wage ad hoc employees while they are still OSD dismissed form service unofficially Apart from this however serious efforts the government somehow started to bring back Changa Manga to the listed of worlds s largest artificially forests Change Manganese Forester was then safely be termed as back to track Water scarcity was the first reason of plant disease and failure The forest administration negotiated with the irritating department and took fullest sanctioned discharge of 113 cusecs for the forest for all seasons This step alone brought very positive results and the forest grew greenhouse again Illegal animals were another source of forest destruction There were mafias that used to use this Forester as the grazing safari and hence all new plantation failed because of abundant illegal grazing 864 Animals in this period were ejected from the forest on self help basis as legislation for the same is still pending although a summary has been approved by the CM in this regard already To tackle the political and social mafias the current administration kept a close liaison with the Chunian Cantt authorities who deployed army patrolling teams in the forest to help forest staff control the damage illicit grazing and snubbing of notoriously habitual offenders Two row boundary planting of large sized plants along the 39 km foundry of the plantation including improvement of boundary road for patrolling has been completed Barbed wire fencing of 30 km along with the RCC posts on the boundary of the forest to check illegal movement has been completed Planting of 9 km large sized fundamental plants along tram line for aesthetic view of the visitors has been completed Construction of main gates on the boundary of plantation to stop illegal movement has been completed Reconstruction of boundary wall with iron grill around forest park to secure 5000 Rft park area and 7050 Rft on the Wankhara side has been completed as well Additionally afforestation of new plants were done in 1500 acre blank area It is pertinent to mention that an additional 4000 acres is still pending afforestation that is respected to be started by next year However 150000 poplar plants have been recently planted on the road sides to give the forest a better look In the same period 52 FIRs have been registered however most of them are still pending investigation as the accused are either themselves or family members of prominent political figures of area including Ch Mehmood Anwar and Rana Muhammad Ishaq Khan blending to ruling party of Punjab Changa Manga has long been waiting for all this Now when things are back on track it shall be expected that the authorities will not turn a blind eye towards affairs and will help forest administration in preventing culprits from further destroying the forest Similarly it is also recommended that encouragement rewards may be given to the current administration for doing honest efforts to save the forest 31 According to Forest Department officials in April 2020 honey sales from Changa Manga wildlife preserve increased from Rs 729 000 in the 2016 17 financial year to Rs 1 3 million in the 2019 2020 financial year This is asserted to be due to increased honeybee presence at the preserve as a result of Billion Tree Project afforestation efforts and decreased use of pesticides and industrial fertilizers in the vicinity of the region 32 See also EditLahore Zoo Safari Forestry in Pakistan List of zoos in Pakistan List of parks and gardens in Lahore List of parks and gardens in Pakistan List of parks and gardens in Karachi Rakh Jhok ForestReferences Edit Abidi Ali Ifrah Syeda Noor Junaid 13 February 2014 Economic Analysis of Forest Management in Pakistan A Case Study of Changa Mange and Muree Forest PDF Munich Personal RePEc Archive Retrieved 14 July 2020 a b Sameer 6 January 2015 The Changa Manga Pakistan Insider Retrieved 15 August 2015 Jalil Xarvi 14 December 2011 Forest land transfers deforestation spiral out of control Pakistan Today Retrieved 15 August 2015 a b Singh et al 2008 p 121 a b c d Barnett 1936 p 205 Indian Forest Ranger College 1946 p 61 a b c Smith 1945 p 10 a b c Mughal Owais 21 October 2007 Changa Manga Forest Railway All Things Pakistan Archived from the original on 4 July 2008 Retrieved 16 August 2015 Introduction to forests of Pakistan rrcap unep org Archived from the original on 12 January 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2010 a b Gorrie 1924 p 246 Gorrie 1924 p 244 a b Ribbentrop 1898 p 156 D Arcy 1887 a b Ribbentrop 1898 p 157 Government of Punjab 1916 p 152 Roy 2006 p 361 Davis 2001 pp 26 27 Lala 2006 p 57 Royal Society of Arts 1916 p 698 Ceylon Agricultural Society 1916 p 257 Smith 1945 p 11 Maxwell Lefroy 1917 p 58 International Vulture Programme The Hawk Conservancy Trust Retrieved 15 August 2015 WWF project preserving endangered vulture species The Express Tribune 5 September 2013 Retrieved 15 August 2015 a b Khan Uzma Murn Campbell 2011 Gyps Vulture Restoration Project Role of Captive Breeding in Endangered Species Management PDF The Journal of Animal and Plant Sciences 21 2 Suppl 405 409 ISSN 1018 7081 Retrieved 15 August 2015 Murn Campbell Khan Uzma Farid Faisal March 2008 Vulture populations in Pakistan and the Gyps Vulture Restoration Project PDF Vulture News 58 35 43 Retrieved 15 August 2015 a b Conservation Overseas Projects Asian Vulture Crisis The Hawk Conservancy Trust Retrieved 15 August 2015 Ahmed Shoaib 9 June 2005 Wildlife Dept setting up 40 acre wildlife park at Changa Manga Daily Times Pakistan Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 26 November 2010 Changa Manga tdcp gop pk Tourist Development Corporation of Pakistan Archived from the original on 31 October 2010 Retrieved 26 November 2010 Khan Waqas A 11 November 2011 Mafia deforests 60pc of worlds largest park The Nation Pakistan Daily The Nation Retrieved 11 November 2011 Khan Waqas A 31 March 2015 Restoration of Changa Manga Forest on the cards The Nation Pakistan Daily The Nation Retrieved 1 April 2015 Billion Tree Project Honey production rises by 70 The Express Tribune 20 April 2020 Retrieved 23 April 2020 References EditRibbentrop Berthold 1898 Rawat Ajay ed Forestry in British India Indus Publishing ISBN 8185182248 Government of Punjab 1916 Punjab District Gazetteers Punjab District and State Gazetteers Muzaffarnagar District India Superintendent Government Printing Smith H Pimm 1945 Capturing Crims for Christ PDF Challenge Series Salvationist Publishing amp Supplies Lala R M 2006 For the Love of India The Life and Times of Jamsetji Tata Portfolio New Delhi India Penguin Group ISBN 9780143062066 D Arcy W E 1887 Working plan of the Changa Manga Plantation Lahore District Punjab India Government Central Press Ceylon Agricultural Society 1916 Salvation Army Silk Camp in Changa Manga Mulberry Forest Indian Forester 42 6 323 324 Maxwell Lefroy Harold 1917 Ansorge Eric Cecil ed The Silk Industry India Superintendent Government Printing Singh Sarina Brown Lindsay Clammer Paul Cocks Rodney 2008 Pakistan and the Karakoram Highway Country Guide Series Lonely Planet ISBN 9781741045420 Indian Forest Ranger College 1946 The Indian Forest Rangers College Annual Dehra Dun India Barnett Alfred H 1936 The Salvation Army in India Journal of the Royal Society of Arts Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts Manufactures and Commerce 85 4391 202 215 JSTOR 41360924 Gorrie R Maclagan 1924 The Irrigated Plantations of the Punjab Empire Forestry Journal Commonwealth Forestry Association 3 2 244 249 JSTOR 42594165 Royal Society of Arts 1916 A Silk Camp Journal of the Royal Society of Arts Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts Manufactures and Commerce 64 3327 698 JSTOR 41347029 Roy Tirthankar 2006 The Economic History of India 1857 1947 2nd edition New Delhi Oxford University Press ISBN 0195684303 Davis Mike 2001 Late Victorian Holocausts El Nino Famine and the Making of the Third World London New York Verso Books ISBN 9781859847398External links EditPakistanpaedia Changa Manga in German Description of Changa Manga plantation Portals Punjab Pakistan Environment Ecology Earth sciences Biology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Changa Manga amp oldid 1097552116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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