MULI BAMBOO - IAS Academy In Coimbatore
MULI BAMBOO
Why in News?
Recently, a research study observed and listed a large variety of animal visitors/predators attracted by the fruit and flowers of Muli Bamboo (Melocanna baccifera).
- The study found that predation is mainly due to the high content of sugars.
- The highest-ever fruit production in a bamboo clump of this species was also reported.
Muli Bamboo
- Muli is the tropical evergreen species of bamboo.
- It is the largest fruit-producing bamboo and is native to the northeast India-Myanmar region.
- It accounts for 90% of the bamboo forests found in the north-eastern state.
- It can be recognised easily by diffused clump habit.
- The plant is also grown as an ornamental.
- ‘Mautam’ is a strange ecological phenomenon associated with Muli Bamboo that occurs once every 48 years.
Mautam:
- ‘Mautam’ means ‘Bamboo death’ in Mizo (mau means bamboo and tam means death).
- During ‘Mautam’, the cyclical, mass bamboo flowering and large fruit production occurs.
- This attracts animal visitors/predators including pollen predators (honey bees), fruit predators (millipedes, slugs and snails, fruit borers, monkeys, rats, porcupines, wild boars and palm civets), seedling predators (rabbits, deer), and insect/pest predators (ants, mantis).
- Black rats greatly relish the fleshy, berry-like fruit of the Muli Bamboo and during this period, the black rats also multiply rapidly, a phenomenon dubbed as ‘Rat Flood.’
- Once the fruits are gone, they start quickly eating-up standing crops.
- This leads to famines claiming thousands of human lives.
- Due to the occurrence of ‘Mautam’, Muli bamboo is locally known as ‘Mautak’.