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Inappropriate clearing of indigenous trees in Taiwan

The Taiwan Academy of Ecology said it found inappropriate forestation work on Dadu Mountain in Greater Taichung, where indigenous plant species had been cut down and new trees planted. Source: Taipei Times

The Forestry Bureau has agreed to investigate.

“Green Forestation is one of the government’s i-Taiwan 12 Projects,” the environmental group said, adding that the project’s goals include maintaining the completeness of the environment at nature reserves, providing space for the survival of plants and animals, preventing inappropriate development behavior and protecting biodiversity.

Taiwan Academy of Ecology secretary-general Tsai Chih-hao said they found China Steel Corp’s subsidiary, Dragon Steel Corp, using inappropriate methods such as clearing out indigenous plant species, applying herbicide and growing economic tree species in the area that it adopted for forestation on the mountain.

He said the area that the company adopted was actually an environmentally sensitive area with rich ecology and many indigenous plant species, such as Acronychia pedunculata (a small evergree, aromatic tree) and Laurocerasus spinulosa, and the Endemic Species Research Institute Conservation Education Center has also discovered leopard cats — an endangered species — in the area in 2004.

A 2005 research survey conducted by Tsai and Yang Kuoh-cheng an associate professor in Providence University’s Department of Ecology, found the forests in the area had been mostly destroyed by fires, but there were still 158 herbaceous plant species and 51 species of trees growing in the area.

The manmade forests created by forestation have a lower tree density, he said, suggesting that the government should reallocate the money for subsidizing green forestation to preventing forest fires.

Dragon Steel’s inappropriate forestation methods are violating the original purpose of the Green Forestation project, and the company is treating the forest as a timber production farm, Yang said.

The Forestry Bureau has said it would look into the case with the Greater Taichung Government.