Solutions

How planting trees and grasses can help stabilise farmland in a changing climate

Certain native species, such as Eucalyptus populnea, can combat the effects of drought. As parts of the country face the toughest drought in people’s lifetimes, tree species that can assist in water and soil management have a renewed purpose.

Need to raise your water table, stabilise your soil or grow an alternate fodder source in arid conditions? There is a tree — or grass — for that.

Fran Bodkin, a Dharawal elder who has degrees in environmental science, geomorphology and climatology, wrote the Encyclopedia Botanica by hand when pregnant and confined to bed rest. She said farmland could be stabilised naturally to help it cope with a changing climate, and it was as simple as planting a few trees.

Using tree teamwork to find balance

Trees are sophisticated pieces of engineering, purpose-built for their habitat. Scientist and botanist Fran Bodkin believes climate change impacts can be mitigated through clever planting. But they work best as a team and can be destructive if planted as a single species.

"One of the things that really bugs me is when we plant only one [species of] gumtree," Ms Bodkin said. "It gives them no support because our ecosystems grew up with […]

About trees, forests, and the water cycle:

3 Surprising Ways Water Depends on Healthy Forests

Forests are key to combating world’s looming water crisis, says new GFEP report

Water and Forests

Figuring out the water cycle… still

What logging does to your water

UN promotes nature-based solutions to growing water shortages

Summary
Article Name
How planting trees and grasses can help stabilise farmland in a changing climate
Description
Fran Bodkin: Need to raise the water table, stabilise the soil or grow an alternate fodder source in arid conditions? There is a tree - or grass - for that.
Author
Publisher Name
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)
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