Scientists cut climbing vines from a damaged Borneo forest. Its canopy then grew three times faster, and the method may cost 10 times less than tree planting
- Dipterocarp forest at the Danum Valley Field Centre.
- The method, which costs up to ten times less than traditional tree-planting programmes, could provide a highly effective way to restore damaged rainforests and increase carbon storage as
Unverified
- Dipterocarp forest at the Danum Valley Field Centre.
- The method, which costs up to ten times less than traditional tree-planting programmes, could provide a highly effective way to restore damaged rainforests and increase carbon storage as
Sources: Times of India