Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a Sustainable Green Economy
Bamboo is also known as “green gold”, “poor man’s timber”, “wonder plant”, contributes substantially to ecological sustainability because of its uniqueness in providing environmental, economic, and social benefits to mankind (Scheba et al., 2017; Manandhar et al., 2019). It offers ecological benef...
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Institut EkoSains Borneo, Universiti Putra Malaysia Bintulu Sarawak Campus
2023
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my.unimas.ir-463472024-10-17T06:54:25Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/46347/ Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a Sustainable Green Economy Mugunthan, Perumal Mohd Effendi, Wasli Johari, Zainudin S Agriculture (General) SB Plant culture Bamboo is also known as “green gold”, “poor man’s timber”, “wonder plant”, contributes substantially to ecological sustainability because of its uniqueness in providing environmental, economic, and social benefits to mankind (Scheba et al., 2017; Manandhar et al., 2019). It offers ecological benefits such as soil conservation and carbon sequestration. Due to its rapid growth rate and organic content, bamboo can be used as a potential tool for mitigating climate change, which also helps to reduce soil erosion and enhance soil quality. Bamboo is widely acknowledged as a green substitute for conventional building materials because of its wood-like attributes, environmentally friendly growing, and sustainable harvesting. Although bamboo is not regarded as wood, it is a fast-growing species of woody grass that can be utilised as an excellent raw material distribution, reducing the demand for wood and wood products as well as the high rate of forest degradation. Bamboo has been dubbed one of the fastest-growing plants on Earth with a short gestation time (3 to 5 years) before reaching maturity and harvest (Atanda, 2015). It may be harvested and replanted in seven years due to its rapid growth, unlike certain indigenous tree species’ 10 to 50 years (Mohamed, 2003; Basumatary et al., 2015). Hence, this makes it appropriate for afforestation purpose. Institut EkoSains Borneo, Universiti Putra Malaysia Bintulu Sarawak Campus 2023 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/46347/1/Potentials%20of%20Bamboo.pdf Mugunthan, Perumal and Mohd Effendi, Wasli and Johari, Zainudin (2023) Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a Sustainable Green Economy. BULLETIN INSTITUT EKOSAINS BORNEO, 2 (2). pp. 39-41. ISSN 2811-4647 https://btu.upm.edu.my/artikel/buletin_institut_ekosains_borneo_volume_2_issue_2_2023-76924 |
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S Agriculture (General) SB Plant culture Mugunthan, Perumal Mohd Effendi, Wasli Johari, Zainudin Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a Sustainable Green Economy |
description |
Bamboo is also known as “green gold”, “poor man’s timber”, “wonder plant”, contributes substantially
to ecological sustainability because of its uniqueness in providing environmental, economic, and social
benefits to mankind (Scheba et al., 2017; Manandhar et al., 2019). It offers ecological benefits such as soil
conservation and carbon sequestration. Due to its rapid growth rate and organic content, bamboo can be
used as a potential tool for mitigating climate change, which also helps to reduce soil erosion and enhance
soil quality. Bamboo is widely acknowledged as a green substitute for conventional building materials
because of its wood-like attributes, environmentally friendly growing, and sustainable harvesting. Although
bamboo is not regarded as wood, it is a fast-growing species of woody grass that can be utilised as an
excellent raw material distribution, reducing the demand for wood and wood products as well as the high
rate of forest degradation. Bamboo has been dubbed one of the fastest-growing plants on Earth with a
short gestation time (3 to 5 years) before reaching maturity and harvest (Atanda, 2015). It may be harvested
and replanted in seven years due to its rapid growth, unlike certain indigenous tree species’ 10 to 50 years
(Mohamed, 2003; Basumatary et al., 2015). Hence, this makes it appropriate for afforestation purpose. |
format |
Article |
author |
Mugunthan, Perumal Mohd Effendi, Wasli Johari, Zainudin |
author_facet |
Mugunthan, Perumal Mohd Effendi, Wasli Johari, Zainudin |
author_sort |
Mugunthan, Perumal |
title |
Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a
Sustainable Green Economy |
title_short |
Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a
Sustainable Green Economy |
title_full |
Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a
Sustainable Green Economy |
title_fullStr |
Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a
Sustainable Green Economy |
title_full_unstemmed |
Potentials of Bamboo and Its Ecological Benefits in a
Sustainable Green Economy |
title_sort |
potentials of bamboo and its ecological benefits in a
sustainable green economy |
publisher |
Institut EkoSains Borneo, Universiti Putra Malaysia Bintulu Sarawak Campus |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/46347/1/Potentials%20of%20Bamboo.pdf http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/46347/ https://btu.upm.edu.my/artikel/buletin_institut_ekosains_borneo_volume_2_issue_2_2023-76924 |
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1814942156774703104 |
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