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Seasonwatch - monitoring seasonal changes in trees in India

Seasonwatch - monitoring seasonal changes in trees in India

Wednesday 11 December 2024 @ 6PM GMT

Seasonwatch - monitoring seasonal changes in trees in India

CPD hours or CEU points available

With Sayee Girdhari

Register here

Trees are the mirrors of seasons and the environmental health of our neighbourhoods. Regular close observation of trees can not only give us immense joy and connect us to our habitat but also help build our understanding of the impact of climate change in our vicinity.

SeasonWatch is a citizen science project monitoring trees all over India to track climate change. This talk demonstrates the 'SeasonWatch' way of learning about and interacting with the trees around us.

Find Seasonwatch on Social media at: SeasonWatch Instagram or Facebook or Twitter

Sayee Girdhari

Sayee Girdhari is the SeasonWatch Project Coordinator. She has studied Botany for her Master's and has been working with SeasonWatch for past 3 years. She handles the social media outreach for the project and conducts immersive tree walks and workshops for in-person engagement.

Register here

Street Tree Survival in Philadelphia and Canopy Soils

With Levon Bigelow and Korena Mafune

February 2024

Street trees are important, highly visible components of the urban forest, providing ecosystem services (e.g., shade) directly to communities. Street tree mortality can result in a loss of ecosystem services for which the trees are planted, particularly premature mortality accelerated by local biophysical and human factors. My study involved a systematic, repeated inventory and mortality analysis of street tree populations in Philadelphia, PA.

Tilia Trees and Wild Streets

With Dr Carrie Brady and Helene Kile

February 2024

Tilia in the limelight: exploring the bacterial microbiome of diseased lime trees

Why do we lose so many trees?

With Russell Miller and James Chambers

February 2024

Why do so many urban trees get felled unnecessarily? This webinar will look at how bad law, poor risk management and weak arboriculture cause premature tree loss; identifying where the law and arboriculture must improve if they are to maintain public confidence through the biodiversity and climate crisis.

Tree decay: a few questions still worth asking

With Dr David Lonsdale

January 2024

David Lonsdale took on the job of leading a research project on decay in amenity trees.

Roots

With Kristin Moldestad and Olve Lundetræ

January 2024

Arboricultural Association is hosting a free live seminar featuring Kristin Moldestad and Olve Lundetræ.

Buy Roots here

Forests before humans - from the first trees to the Ice ages

With Sir Harry Studholme

January 2024

How trees evolved, from photosynthesis to the ice age. Their part in the last 380 million years of planetary history.

Ancient Trees and Planning

With Jim Mullholland and Emma Gilmartin

January 2024

Jim Mullholland and Emma Gilmartin joins us for a fascinating webinar centered around veteran trees and planning.

Woodlands at War: The Impact and Legacy of WWI and WWII on Britain’s Woodlands

With Clive Mayhew

December 2023

This webinar focuses on the largely overlooked contribution made by British woodlands over two world wars.

Tree Selection for climate resilience

With Henrik Sjöman and Arit Anderson

December 2023

There is an increasingly positive attitude towards trees and tree planting in urban environments, not only among landscape professionals, but from those who previously did not understand the importance of the urban canopy.

Britain’s Ancient Forest - Legacy and Lore

With Julian Hight

December 2023

Julian explores the story of Britain’s ancient forest told through its remaining ancient trees and surviving customs – living links to our rich history – accompanied by specially written forest music and archive photography.

A farmer’s guide to ash dieback

With Eleanor Marks (LEAF) and Berglind Karlsdóttir (Forest Research)

November 2023

Arboricultural Association is hosting a free live seminar featuring Eleanor Marks (LEAF) and Berglind Karlsdóttir (Forest Research)