At the recent Environmental Awareness Awards a group of year 7 students from Oberon High School received a “Highly Commended” award for planting trees along the Oberon to Tarana railway corridor. They did a great job of planting many native trees which should grow well in the current moist conditions.
( Teacher Tim Francey, and Year 7 representatives)
Why Plant Trees
Trees provide an extraordinary range of environmental benefits. Science has shown that trees perform a vital function in:
· Controlling salinity by regulating surface and underground water tables
· Water purification
· Improving soils (and protecting their release of carbon)
· Reducing wind erosion
· Providing wildlife habitat
· Protecting and rehabilitating biodiversity
· Aiding bird migration
· Supporting downstream fisheries and recreation
· Providing shelter for livestock
· Generating renewable energy
· Beautifying the landscape
It is perhaps their least acclaimed role as cleaners of the atmosphere that is re-elevating their status as environmental saviours. Trees clean the atmosphere by absorbing carbon dioxide emissions, converting the carbon to wood through the process of photosynthesis, and storing it within their roots, stems, branches and leaves. Trees are approximately 50% stored carbon.
Trees therefore offer humanity an opportunity to neutralize the harmful emissions we generate when we drive our cars, fly in planes and power our homes and factories.
The role of trees has been ratified by the world’s governing scientific authority on climate change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), as a formal mechanism for the offsetting of greenhouse gases.
The National Parks and Wildlife Service have a fact sheet called Native Shelterbelts which emphasises the advantages of using Australian native trees as a superior habitat for wildlife. The Central West Catchments Management Authority has been established by the New South Wales Government as an independent, statutory authority to engage communities in the management of natural resources within their catchments. They have various incentive programs that may assist in developing a tree planting plan that will improve health and management of natural resources within our catchments such as controlling erosion, fencing off streams etc.

