10 Oct 2021
The Ipoh City Councillor (MBI) has planted 88
trees as part of the 1,500 pledged for 2021 at Taman Pakatan Jaya in Ipoh. This
is part of the Perak Bumi Lestari Project which aims to plant 1 million trees
by 2030. It is also in line with MBI’s Low Carbon City 2030 mission.
By scanning the QR code, the public will the be linked to a website containing the information about the trees planted.
Two major types of trees planted here include; the tembusu or Fragraea fragrans and the Bunga Tanjung or Mimusops elengi.
The tembusu or Fragraea fragrans can grow up to 25m tall. The wood can last over a hundred years, particularly as termites and beetles do not eat this kind of wood. The tree yields a high quality timber and an excellent fuel and charcoal. It is planted in reforestation and soil stabilization programmes and is also often planted as an ornamental and shade tree in parks and along roads.
The Bunga Tanjung or Mimusops elengi has other common names which include Spanish cherry, medlar, and bullet wood. Its timber is valuable, the fruit is edible, and it is used in traditional medicine. As the trees give thick shade and flowers emit fragrance, it is a prized collection of gardens. The tree can grow up to 16m with 1m circumference.
The temperature in this area will be much lower. The environment will be much greener with more oxygen produced making those people from about 1,000 households living here become healthier. Of course the price of the property will also increase as a result.
Thus, we hope that the people will appreciate what MBI is doing. They should help protect the trees here rather than destroying and replacing them with mango and rambutan trees.
The trees were planted along Laluan Hulu Bercham 1 as shown below:
These trees form part of the Perak Lestari 1,000,000 million trees programme and also the MBI Low Carbon City projects to save our planet Earth. Trees help to absorb carbon emission and lower earth temperature. Effort must be made to reduce the earth temperature to not more than 2 degrees Celcius.
The impact of global warming is real and climate change is already happening now. By 2050 if nothing is done, climate change will cause disaster worse than thee covid-19 pandemic now.
Each tree will be tied with a tag which contain information about the tree planted and when it was planted by MBI.
Two variety of trees were planted here. According to MBI Town and Landscape Department, the two types of trees are:
1. The tembusu or Fragraea fragrans
2. The Bunga Tanjung or Mimusops elengi
Its trunk is dark brown, with deeply fissured bark, looking somewhat like a bittergourd. The tree grows in an irregular shape from 10 to 25 metres high, with light green oval-shaped leaves, and yellowish flowers with a distinct fragrance. The fruits of the tree are bitter tasting red berries, which are eaten by Pteropus fruit bats.
The trunk of this tree can produce very hard wood that can be used to make chopping boards.
The wood can last over a hundred years, particularly as termites and weevils do not eat this kind of wood. People always use this wood for creating the floors of their homes and love to sleep on it.
The tree yields a high quality timber and an excellent fuel and charcoal. It is planted in reforestation and soil stabilization programmes and is also often planted as an ornamental and shade tree in parks and along roads.
For details: Fragraea Fragrans
2. The Bunga Tanjung or Mimusops elengi
Mimusops elengi is a medium-sized evergreen tree found in tropical forests in South Asia, Southeast Asia and northern Australia. English common names include Spanish cherry, medlar, and bullet wood. Its timber is valuable, the fruit is edible, and it is used in traditional medicine. As the trees give thick shade and flowers emit fragrance, it is a prized collection of gardens.
Its flower is the provincial flower of Yala Province, Thailand, as well as the city flower of Ampang Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia.
For details: Mimusops elengi