The Indian National Science Academy (INSA) arranged a
seminar last week on the history of science in India, with particular
focus on the last 100 years. Among the various topics, work in the area
of genetics during the early years of the 20th century was
presented by Dr. Durgadas Kasbekar of the Centre for DNA Fingerprinting
and Diagnostics, Hyderabad. In a gripping and highly informative half an
hour, he presented three advances made in India, namely the success
story of sugarcane breeding, the discovery of the Bombay Blood Type (the
“O” subgroup) and the mathematical analysis of the mapping of genes
distributed across the length of the chromosome. Of these, the story of
sugarcane breeding and generating new varieties was particularly
gripping not only for its glorious success but also because it
highlighted the dedicated work of a lady scientist named Edavaleth
Kakkat Janaki Ammal. And this story is worth retelling.
Dr.
K.T. Achaya has written in his authoritative book, “Indian Food: A
Historical Companion” (OUP 1994) that while sugarcane was well known and
grown in India since the Rigvedic times (c. 1500 BC), as
Ikshu
, and Kautilya (c. 300 BC) mentions a whole range of products from
sugarcane, our canes were not as sweet as those from the Far East. They
had however robust stalks. Achaya in his other book: “A historical
dictionary of Indian food” (OUP 1998) states that the Tamil book
Agananuru
mentions that when carts got stuck in the mud, stalks of sugarcane were
heaped beneath the wheel to provide a grip! Such has been the robustness
of our sugarcane.
The sweetest sugarcane comes from Papua New Guinea, and termed
Saccharum officianarum.
Also called ‘noble’ cane, it migrated northwest to Asia. During the
early 1900s, India actually imported this sweet sugar from Java and the
Far East. The freedom fighter and scholar Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya
had suggested in the 1910s that we in India should do botanical work to
sweeten our own varieties (called
S. spontaneum
). This led to the start of the Sugarcane Breeding Station at
Coimbatore, Madras Presidency, led by C. A. Barber, which took on the
task of improving the Indian sugarcane plants. He and his assistant T.S.
Venkataraman began crossing the ‘noble’
S. Officianarum
females with
S. Spontaneum
males.
As Kasbekar explains, when the pollen of
spontaneum
fertilized eggs of
officianarum
, the products retained the full chromosome complement of
officianarum
, generating a hybrid sugarcane plant as sweet as
officianarum
and with robust stalks as in
spontaneum.
Back-crossing of the hybrid male with
officianarum was
even more successful. Success was thus achieved in producing sweeter
varieties of Indian sugarcane. These Coimbatore breeds (Co-canes) were
so successful that in the first year itself they increased sugarcane
production in Punjab by 50 per cent, and were even exported to places
like Cuba. Between 1930 and 1935, this work of Venkataraman led to a
doubling of sugarcane production in the country.
It was during this time that the young girl from Tellichery, Kerala, Janaki Ammal (b. Nov 4, 1897) moved
to do her BSc and BSc Honours from Queen Mary’s and Presidency Colleges,
Madras. With a scholarship, she moved to the University of Michigan,
U.S. to get her MS in 1925. She came back, got her DSc in 1931 and
joined the Sugarcane Breeding Station at Coimbatore to work with
Venkataraman on sugarcane biology. She was an expert in cytogenetics
(the genetic content and expression of genes in the cell). She had known
that plants display polyploidy (collection of not just two pairs of
chromosomes in each cell, as our body cells do, but many multiples of 2,
e.g., 2n = 48, 56, 64, 72 and even 112). Her research in this area led
to our understanding of the nature of polyploidy in sugarcane, forming a
firm scientific basis for crossing and hybrids, but also helped in
choosing plant varieties for cross-breeding. It also helped analyse the
geographical distribution of sugarcane across India, and to establish
that
S. Spontaneum
is sugarcane that originated in India.
She
left Coimbatore to join the John Innes Institute at London and then the
Royal Horticulture Society at Wisley, during the years 1945-51. A
summary of the life and times of Janaki Ammal has been written by the
famous scholar in plant pathology and evolution, Professor
Chiryathumadom Venkatachalier Subramanian of Chennai
(www.ias.ac.in/womenin science/Janaki.pdf). He writes that Nehru invited
Janaki Ammal to return and reorganize the Botanical Survey of India.
She came back and ran the Botanical Survey of India.
Even
earlier than Nehru, Professor C.V. Raman saw the spark in her and made
her a Foundation Fellow of the Academy. Years later, in 1957, she was
elected to INSA — the first woman scientist elected to any of the
science academies in India. She was also awarded the Padma Shri in 1957.
Having led a full life, she breathed her last on February 4, 1984.
Think about it; every time you bite a sugarcane, or a lump of
gud
or
vellam
, you are enjoying the fruits of toil of Barber, Venkataraman and Janaki.
D. BALASUBRAMANIAN in The Hindu dated 16 Oct. 2014
dbala@lvpei.org
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