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The Indian Forester is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering research in forestry. It is one of the oldest forestry journals still in existence in the world. [ 1 ] It was established in 1875 and is published by the Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education .
By this forest-in-name-only method, the total amount of recorded forest, per official Indian records, was 71.8 million hectares. [22] Any comparison of forest coverage number of a year before 1987 for India, to current forest coverage in India, is thus meaningless; it is just bureaucratic record keeping, with no relation to reality or ...
The Indian Forester: journal home: Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education: 1875–present English 12 issues per year International Journal of Forest Engineering: journal home: Taylor & Francis and Forest Products Society 1989–present English 3 issues per year Indian Journal of Forestry: journal home: Bishen Singh Mahendra Pal Singh ...
1878 - Imperial Forest School, Dehradun, India (founded by Dietrich Brandis, for the British Imperial Forestry Service); today, incorporated into the Indian Forest Research Institute, Dehradun; Sir William Schlich, Carl Schenck, and others, Saxony 1892
Hugh Cleghorn, charcoal drawing made by Theodore Blake Wirgman on 6 July 1888 [1]. Hugh Francis Clarke Cleghorn (9 August 1820 – 16 May 1895) was a Madras-born Scottish physician, botanist, forester and land owner.
An urban forest in the city of Lucknow, slowly development is happening around this forest but the main forest is preserved by the government, a Night Safari and a modern Zoo has also been proposed here by the government. Mhadei Wildlife Sanctuary: Sattari taluk, Goa: 208.5 km 2: Bengal tigers can be found here. Molai forest
Jadav "Molai" Payeng (born 31 October 1959) is an environmental activist [1] and forestry worker from Majuli, [2] popularly known as the Forest Man of India. [3] [4] Over the course of several decades, he has planted and tended trees on a sandbar of the river Brahmaputra turning it into a forest reserve.
He also took an interest in the forest flora of northwest and central India and of Indian trees in general. Even after retirement, Brandis continued to work on Indian forestry and, at the age of 75, he started his principal botanical work, Indian Trees, dealing with 4400 species. It was first published in 1906 and re-issued several times ...