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Manu

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views

Manu

Uploaded by

Goo Gle
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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WELCOME

VISVESVARAYA TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY, BELAGAVI-590018


GOVERNMENT ENGINEERING COLLEGE, RAMANAGARA.

A Report on
‘SOCIAL CONNECT AND RESPOSNSIBILTY’

Seminar Coordinator Presented by


Mrs. SUMITHRA MANOJ KUMAR N B
Asst. Prof 1GG19EC025
Dept. of ECE, GECR
CONTENTS:

 MODULE 1:Plantation and Adaptation of tree


 MODULE 2:Heritage walk and Crafts corner
 MODULE 3:Organic farming and waste management
 MODULE 4:Water conservation
 MODULE 5:Food walk
MODULE 1:Plantation and Adaptation of tree

A plantation is an agricultural estate, generally centered on a plantation house, meant


for farming that specializes in cash crops, usually mainly planted with a single crop, with
perhaps ancillary areas for vegetables for eating and so on. The crops that are grown
include cotton, cannabis, coffee, tea, cocoa, sugar cane, opium, sisal, oil seeds, oil palms,
fruits, rubber trees and forest.
Benefits of Planting Trees

Most often we plant trees to provide shade and beautify our


landscapes. These are great benefits but trees also provide other less
obvious benefits.
Social Benefits
• Trees make life nicer. It has been shown that spending time among
trees and green spaces reduces the amount of stress that we carry
around with us in our daily lives.
• Hospital patients have been shown to recover from surgery more
quickly when their hospital room offered a view of trees.
• Children have been shown to retain more of the information taught
in schools if they spend some of their time outdoors in green spaces.
• Trees are often planted as living memorials or reminders of loved
ones or to commemorate significant events in our lives.
Environmental Benefits
• Treesoffer many environmental benefits.
• Trees reduce the urban heat island effect through evaporative cooling and reducing the
amount of sunlight that reaches parking lots and buildings.
• Trees improve our air quality by filtering harmful dust and pollutants such as ozone, carbon
monoxide, and sulfur dioxide from the air we breathe.
• Trees give off oxygen that we need to breathe.
• Trees reduce the amount of storm water runoff, which reduces erosion and pollution in our
waterways and may reduce the effects of flooding.
Many species of wildlife depend on trees for habitat. Trees provide food, protection, and
homes for many birds and mammals.

Economic Benefits
• Well placed trees can reduce your cooling costs in the summer by shading the south and
west sides of your home. If deciduous trees are used they will allow the sun to pass through
• Evergreen trees on the north side of your home and shrubs around the foundation of your
STEPS FOR PROPER PLANTING

1. Look up for wires/lights


2. Dig shallow/wide hole
3. Find the top-most root and treat root defects
4. Place tree in hole
5. Position top root 1-2 inches above landscape soil
6. Straighten tree
7. Remove synthetic materials
8. Add backfill soil and firm the root ball
9. Add mulch
10. Stake and prune if needed
MODULE 2: Heritage walk and Crafts corner

Janapada Loka, located in Ramanagara District, is a fantastic museum that displays the
beautiful folk art from the different regions of Karnataka. This has become quite popular
among tourists as it offers an excellent opportunity to observe the myriad folk art of
Karnataka and as well as internalize the Heritage and Culture of the state.
The main campus of Janapada Loka is magnificently decorated with tribal art symbols and
design that represent the folk tradition of the beautiful state of Karnataka.
HISTORY
FOLK ARTS OF MUSEUM
 Musical instruments used in tribal culture on display
 A stone sculpture of god Vishnu in reclining posture on display in the shilama wing
 The first museum building in the complex is the Lokamatha Mandira where exhibits
consists of various types of rural household items and agricultural tools.
 Loka mahal has a display of 5000 folk art facts .This wing of the museum is a double
storied building ,which has a profusion of exhibits of large
MODULE 3: ORGANIC FARMING & WASTE WATER MANAGEMENT
Organic farming can be defined as an agricultural process that uses
biological fertilizers and pest control acquired from animal or plant
waste.
 Organic farming was actually initiated as an answer to the
environmental sufferings caused by the use of chemical pesticides and
synthetic fertilizers.
Organic farming, also known as ecological farming or biological
farming, is an agricultural system that uses fertilizers of organic origin
such as compost manure, green manure, and bone meal and places
emphasis on techniques such as crop rotation an
Organic food products

The basic idea of organic agriculture is to provide food with optimum


nutritional value and minimum dangerous ingredients, with only
permitted substances used. The principle also requires 100% natural
forage for livestock and its further processing without synthetics.
Biofertilizers

Biofertilizers are defined as preparations containing living cells or


latent cells of efficient strains of microorganisms that help crop
plants’ uptake of nutrients by their interactions in the rhizosphere
when applied through seed or soil.
MODULE 4:WATER CONSERVATION
• Water conservation is the practice of using water efficiently to reduce unnecessary
water usage. According to Fresh Water Watch, water conservation is important
because fresh clean water is a limited resource, as well as a costly one. As a
homeowner, you’re probably already well aware of the financial costs of
inefficient water use. Conservation of this natural resource is critical for the
environment — and our wallets
WAYS TO CONSERVE WATER

•Check your toilet for leaks.


•Stop using your toilet as an ashtray or wastebasket.
•Put a plastic bottle in your toilet tank.
•Take shorter showers.
•Install water-saving shower heads or flow restrictors.
•Turn off the water while brushing your teeth.
•Turn off the water while shaving.
RAIN WATER HARVESTING

Rainwater harvesting (RWH) is the collection and storage of rain, rather


than allowing it to run off. Rainwater is collected from a roof-like
surface and redirected to a tank, cistern, deep pit (well, shaft, or
borehole), aquifer, or a reservoir with percolation, so that it seeps down
and restores the ground water.
DUAL PLUMBING

• Must monitor plants for over fertilization and watering.


• Must be careful about ingredients in laundry soaps and cleaners,
some can harm your plants.
• A family of four can create 30-40 thousand gallons of water, if
system is used to full potential.
MODULE 5: Food walk
Foods and beverages which are prepared and sold by the sellers on places
like streets, festival areas and consumed by the consumers on the run as
known as street food .
• These foods are alternative to homemade food are more affordable when compared with the
food supplied at the restaurants.
• The areas where the street foods are mostly critised and seen as a threat for health are that the
places where they are produced and sold are open to dirt and contamination and that hygiene ,
attitude , and applications adopted by the sellers during the preparation and storage of the food
are insufficient . As a descriptive research ,this study aims to provide In formation on street
food consumption with general specifications of street food, the reasons why they are
preferred ,and general conditions like hygiene , quality , and safety.
THANK YOU

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