Nearly 50% tree species planted recently at Central Ridge ‘unsuitable’ for terrain | Delhi News

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5 min readNew DelhiUpdated: Jun 28, 2026 08:15 AM IST

With June about to end, Butea monosperma — commonly known as dhak or ‘flame of the forest’ — has entered its fruiting season. The tree’s fiery orange-red blossom gives way to broad, papery seed-pods that will soon disperse with monsoon. It is a characteristic species of Delhi’s dry deciduous forests and among the first trees to naturally regenerate degraded landscapes. Yet it represents only part of the recent plantation choices on the Capital’s ecologically sensitive Ridge.

An analysis by The Indian Express of plantation records from the Delhi Forest and Wildlife Department, covering drives over the last four years in Central Ridge, shows that out of at least 22 species planted, only seven are characteristic Ridge species. Nine, or nearly half of them, are considered unsuitable for the Ridge ecosystem, including three exotics. Six are native species not naturally found in the Ridge but considered only marginally adaptable under sustained irrigation and nutrient input. The Central Ridge stretches across 864 hectares, covering Dhaula Kuan, Sardar Patel Marg to Mandir Marg, institutional zones, and stretches of Inderpuri and Naraina industrial edges.

The Indian Express reached out to the Forest Department in this regard but did not get a response.

Why tree-species selection is important

A decadal Working Plan (2026-27 to 2036-27) recently rolled out by the Forest Research Institute (FRI) for the Delhi government noted that invasive species account for 44.13% of relative dominance in parts of the Central Ridge. In some zones, regeneration patterns are more severe: invasive species such as Leucaena leucocephala show a regeneration stocking percentage of 100%, with internal observations of a potential long-term shift in forest composition if unchecked. “While the current canopy remains predominantly native, future forest composition may be entirely overtaken by invasive species if unchecked,” the plan noted, warning of risks to biodiversity and ecosystem stability. It recommended targeted removal of invasive seedlings and active promotion of native regeneration.

Ecological mismatch of trees planted

Species lists from Central Ridge plantation drives between 2021 and 2025 include a limited set of Ridge-appropriate natives such as dhak (Butea monosperma), khair (Acacia senegal), Holoptelea integrifolia, and Cassia fistula. These species are naturally adapted to dry deciduous conditions and form part of the historical Aravalli-Ridge assemblage. However, a significant share of planted species fall outside this ecological range.

Exotic species include Sausage tree (Kigelia africana), Jacaranda (Jacaranda mimosifolia), and Jungle Jalebi (Pithecellobium dulce). Others such as Kadamba (Neolamarckia cadamba), Kachnar (Bauhinia variegata), and Bakain (Melia azedarach) are not characteristic of Ridge ecosystems and typically require higher moisture availability. A third category includes native Indian species that are not naturally part of the Ridge ecosystem, such as banyan (Ficus benghalensis), Peepal (Ficus religiosa), Semal (Bombax ceiba), and Bael (Aegle marmelos). While ecologically versatile, these species belong to different forest types.

Environmentalist and author Pradip Krishen cautions against treating “native” as a uniform category. “Contractors tend to pick species that are convenient, easily available in bulk rather than species that are actually appropriate for a specific landscape like the Ridge,” Krishen told The Indian Express. “Native is a highly misleading term. What grows in one part of Delhi at the Yamuna khadar or other moist alluvial systems cannot be assumed to be suitable for the Ridge, which is a dry, rocky ecosystem with very different soil and moisture conditions,” he said.

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In Trees of Delhi, his book, Krishen has said that species such as Kanju (Holoptelea integrifolia) is noted as drought-tolerant pioneers of disturbed, well-drained habitats, while others like amaltas (Cassia fistula) and dhak can adapt to dry deciduous forest conditions.

Both Jacaranda and Jungle Jalebi can compete with the native dry deciduous forest species. These are exotic species which were introduced from their origin countries (see box). Some of these are ornamental in nature and hence, ecologically weak for restoration and mainly are an aesthetic plantation species. Bakain is a naturalised exotic. Even when it is fast-growing but short-lived, it tends to dominate disturbed areas and displace slower native regenerating species.

Other plantation species included Gamhar (Gmelina arborea) which is a moist forest species and performs poorly in dry, rocky ridge terrain and is left often stunted in Delhi conditions.

Similarly, Chamrod (Ehretia laevis) recognized by its white, star-shaped flowers and pale, knobbly trunk although is very common in East Aravallis and drought-hardy, but its strong root-suckering habit can create unmanaged spread in restoration plots and needs careful placement.

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Found commonly in Delhi avenues with voluptuous blooms of scarlet flowers, Semal is a dry deciduous and moist forest species that is reasonably drought-hardy. It thrives best where soils can retain moisture, near rivulets or streams.

Meanwhile, the Forest and Wildlife Department in an official statement on June 22, maintained that a large scale plantation programme in the Southern Ridge is underway wherein ecological restoration principles are being followed, with “scientifically designed interventions, careful species selection, regular monitoring and long-term maintenance practices,” and a focus on “native and ridge-specific species.” It added that this was part of a larger Aravalli restoration plan involving over 10 lakh native trees across degraded landscapes in the Asola Bhatti Wildlife Sanctuary and surrounding Ridge areas.

 

Sophiya Mathew is a Correspondent at The Indian Express, based in New Delhi. She joined the Delhi bureau in 2024, and has specialization in Integrated Multimedia Journalism from the Asian College of Journalism (ACJ), Chennai.

Professional Background

Core Beats: Her reporting is primarily focused on the Environment and Education.

Specialization: She has gained recognition for her ground-level reporting on the Yamuna floodplains and the socio-economic challenges faced by those living on its banks. She also focuses on the disparities in Delhi’s education system, ranging from elite private schools to government institutions and refugee education.

Recent Notable Articles (December 2025)

Her recent work has been heavily centered on Delhi’s severe winter pollution crisis and the government’s regulatory responses:

1. The Air Pollution Crisis

“A tale of two cities: Delhi govt schools choke in bad air, private classrooms set up air filters” (Dec 20, 2025): A high-impact feature contrasting the “Clean Air Bubbles” in elite schools with the reality of government school students who are exposed to an equivalent of 17 cigarettes a day due to outdoor exposure.

“Delhi sees season’s worst air day, second worst December AQI in nearly a decade” (Dec 15, 2025): An analytical report on the meteorological patterns trapping pollutants in the NCR.

“Delhi bans non-BS VI vehicles from outside: Why curbing vehicular pollution is key” (Dec 17, 2025): Explaining the science behind targeting specific vehicle vintages to lower particulate matter.

2. Enforcement & Regulations

“No fuel at pumps in Delhi without valid PUC certificate from December 18” (Dec 17, 2025): Breaking the news on the environment ministry’s strict “No PUC, No Fuel” policy.

3. Education Policy

“Law to regulate school fee in Delhi risks becoming procedural, say parents” (Dec 13, 2025): Investigating the loopholes in the new Delhi School Education (Transparency in Fixation and Regulation of Fees) Bill, 2025.

“Monsoon Session: Private school fee regulation Bill cleared after four-hour debate” (Aug 9, 2025): Covering the legislative passage of the controversial fee hike regulation.

Signature Style

Sophiya is known for her observational depth. Her reporting often includes vivid details from school corridors, hospital waitlists, or the banks of the Yamuna to illustrate how policy failures affect the city’s most vulnerable residents. She is a frequent expert guest on the 3 Things podcast, where she explains the complexities of Delhi’s environmental laws.

X (Twitter): @SophiyaMathew1 … Read More

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