Home / Environment / News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Inhibitor Injection Will Put Curse of Catkins to An End
Adjust font size:
Some 20,000 female willows and poplars in Beijing will get special injections by May to stop flying catkins.

Catkins, or flower clusters, often wreak havoc on people's allergies and disrupt traffic by reducing visibility on roads.

Horticulturists will burrow up to 2 centimeters into the trunk and inject a liquid growth inhibitor, which will halt reproduction but still encourage vegetative growth of the tree. 

"It means that with the inhibitor, female willows and poplars will grow stronger with thicker crowns, but much less or no blossoms," Che Shaochen, a researcher at Beijing Horticulture Research Institute, said.

Since 2001, the city has issued a new regulation that only male willows and poplars can be planted in the city proper.

But statistics with the institute showed that by 2005, there were still nearly 1 million female willows and poplars in the Beijing city proper. Most of them were planted in the 1960s-70s.

Every spring, a large amount of catkins, namely blossoms of female willows and poplars, fly everywhere in the capital city.

Too many catkins can degrade air quality, cause respiratory diseases, and block the heat sinks of automobiles, resulting in their breakdown.

Che said the inhibitor was a "tailored one" which had never been used, but had been successfully trialled last year.

It must be injected once a year during the budding period, which usually lasts from early March to the end of May, he said.

Local horticulturists have experimented with this new method since 2006. They have also tried "transsexual surgeries" on about 100 willow trees by grafting some branches of male willows onto the trunks of female willows.

But grafting was less preferred than inhibitors, Che said, adding the cost was about 10 times higher than inhibitor injections.

In addition, grafting could only be used on willows but not adult poplars because the branches of poplars were positioned much higher, according to Han Yifan, a retired expert at Beijing Forestry Research Institute.

(China Daily March 24, 2007)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous

China Archives
Related >>
- China Plants 5.23 mln Hectares of Trees in 2006
- More Green Area in Chinese Cities
- Lawmaker Proposes Tree Burial to Save Land
- Blind People Get Involved, Planting Trees on Arbor Day
- Bloom Time in East China Village
Most Viewed >>
Air Quality 
Cities Major Pollutant Air Quality Level
Beijing particulate matter II
Shanghai particulate matter III1
Guangzhou sulfur dioxide II
Chongqing particulate matter III2
Xi'an particulate matter III1
Most Read
- White paper on energy
- Endangered monkeys grow in number
- Yangtze River's Three Gorges 2 mln years in the making
- The authorities sets sights on polluted soil
- China, US benefit from clean energy
NGO Events Calendar Tips
- Hand in hand to protect endangered animals and plants
- Changchun, Mini-marathon Aimed at Protecting Siberian Tiger
- Water Walk by Nature University
- Green Earth Documentary Salon
- Prof. Maria E. Fernandez to Give a Lecture on Climate Change
More
Archives
UN meets on climate change
The UN Climate Change Conference brought together representatives of over 180 countries and observers from various organizations.
Panda Facts
A record 28 panda cubs born via artificial insemination have survived in 2006.
South China Karst
Rich and unique karst landforms located in south China display exceptional natural beauty.
Saving the Tibetan Antelopes
The rare animals survive in the harsh natural environment of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
More
Laws & Regulations
- Forestry Law of the People's Republic of China
- Meteorology Law of the People's Republic of China
- Fire Control Law of the People's Republic of China
- Law on Protecting Against and Mitigating Earthquake Disasters
- Law of the People's Republic of China on Conserving Energy
More
Links:
State Environmental Protection Administration
Ministry of Water Resources
Ministry of Land and Resources
China Environmental Industry Network
Chengdu Giant Panda Research Base