Category Archives: Nature

MADRAS MISCELLANY : The long and the Shortt of it

When I revise my book on the Anglo-Indians, one of the many achievers I will have to add to my already long list will be Dr. John Shortt of the Madras Medical Services in the 19th Century. He could well have been one of the Madras Medical School’s first students when it was founded in 1835 with ten East Indians, as Anglo-Indians were then known, to be trained as apothecaries and 11 Indians to be trained as dressers, both, however, being additionally trained in diagnostic and aftercare skills. Among the four-member staff to train them, headed by Surgeon Mortimer, was Apothecary D’Beaux, an East Indian, and P. Muthuswami Mudaliar, but where they were trained I have not been able to trace. It was possibly this team that trained John Shortt.

To cut a long story to Shortt, he joined the East India Company’s services as an Assistant Apothecary. He must have been something exceptional even then, for he was selected to go to Edinburgh to study further. There he got an MD degree before returning to India to join the Madras Medical Services in 1854. In the Service, he served with the rank Surgeon-Major. When he retired 25 years later, he was serving in the rank of Colonel and, more importantly, as the Deputy Surgeon-General of the Madras Presidency, quite an achievement in those days for an East Indian.

Like many Government officials in those days, Shortt too spent much time on a variety of interests which got them wider recognition. His interests were botany, biology and anthropology. His published works included a paper on the Indigo plant in 1860, an anthropological study of the Todas, and a paper on the coffee plant. His paper on Indigo, written when he was Zillah (District) Surgeon, Chingleput, was published by ‘Pharoah and Co’. It was a publication noteworthy for its two-column page format featuring the English text in the left column and the “Hindustani translation” in Urdu script on the right. Shortt also practised as a veterinary surgeon after his retirement in Yercaud till his death. Out of his experiences of those years came a book titled A Manual Of Indian Cattle And Sheep: Their Breeds, Management And Diseases published by Higginbotham’s.

A page from Dr. Shortt’s book on Indigo / The Hindu
A page from Dr. Shortt’s book on Indigo / The Hindu

His work in biology was responsible for Shortt being invited to be a Fellow of the Linnean Society, London. He was later to propose Dr. Senjee Pulney Andy (Miscellany, August 26, 2013) for a Fellowship of the Society. Both of them independently wrote articles on the branching palms in South India that were published in 1869 in two different journals of the Linnean Society. Both also wrote on the Palmyrah and other flora in the journals of the Madras Agri-Horticultural Society. Shortt, who in the early 1870s, was listed as the Superintendent-General of Vaccination, was probably Pulney Andy’s boss, the latter serving as the Superintendent of Vaccination, Malabar, at the time. Shortt was also during this period the Secretary of the Obstetrical Society of Madras. He passed away in Yercaud on April 24, 1889. I wonder whether a reader in Yercaud can come up with a picture of Shortt’s tombstone and a note on his practice there.

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The Turings of Madras

Alan Turing / The Hindu
Alan Turing / The Hindu

It was Vishwas Ghaskadbi who set me on this trail by sending me an extraordinary story of coincidence related by Anvar Alikhan shortly after the story appeared of the famed World War II code breaker, Alan Mathison Turing, also known as the ‘Father of the Computer’, being pardoned posthumously by Queen Elizabeth II 60 years after he had been convicted for homosexuality. Shortly after the conviction, Turing had committed suicide.

Alikhan, doing a bit of research on Turing, discovered that Turing had connections with Madras on both sides of his family. The trail led to a house in Coonoor to which had retired E.W. Stoney, a railwayman, who was the father of Ethel Sara Stoney, the mother of Alan Turing. Then came the amazing coincidence — The Gables, which still survives in Coonoor, was bought by Nandan Nilekani, one of India’s leading authorities on the IT industry. He had no idea that his holiday home had a Turing connection — till Alikhan showed him indisputable evidence dating to 1916 that E.W. Stoney had indeed been the owner of The Gables.

Nandan Nilekani / The Hindu
Nandan Nilekani / The Hindu

The statement by Alikhan that Turing had connections with Madras on both sides of the family got me searching for the trail of the Turings of Madras. The Turing story in Madras begins in 1729 with Robert Turing, the fourth son of Sir John Turing, the 3rd Baronet, being appointed Surgeon’s mate in Fort St. David, on the recommendation of Dr. John Turing (a kinsman?), who was the Surgeon of the East Indiaman Greenwich which called at Madras that year. By 1741, Dr. Robert Turing was Surgeon at Vizagapatam and then served in Madras from 1753 to 1762 as a Presidency Surgeon. He lived in a house near Harris Bridge, which is near the Casino Theatre.

Dr. Robert Turing helped Robert Clive to recover from a prolonged illness in 1752 and had him fit to sail for England early in 1753. He was also a persistent advocate for a much larger hospital in the Fort. He wanted space for 250 men, an area to treat 200-300 seamen when the Fleet was in the Roads, and an operating theatre. It was from Sir John Turing’s brother Walter’s line that Alan Turing descended; his father was Julius Mathison Turing, an ICS officer who served in Bihar and the Ganjam District of Madras Presidency.

Whether they were connected with Robert Turing or not, there were in Madras in the second half of the 18th Century John and William Turing, both in the Madras Civil Service, and James and Robert Turing in the Madras Army. John Turing Senior was Sheriff in 1767 (an office William Turing who entered the Civil Service in 1769 was to hold in 1778) and Mayor in 1776. He lived in a garden house in Vepery. Another John Turing, Junior, arrived in 1795 and died in Vizagapatam in 1808. Significantly, that great chronicler of Madras History, H.D. Love, writes c.1912 that “the name of Turing is still represented in the Indian Civil Service in the Southern Presidency.”

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Features> MetroPlus> Madras Miscellany / by S. Muthiah / Chennai – January 12th, 2014

Record banana harvest in Theni: horticulture department

Madurai :

Banana farmers in Theni district have produced a record 120 tonnes of bananas per hectare breaking national record, claimed a horticulture department official.

Several farms in Kamayakoundanpatti in Theni district yielded 120 tonnes of banana per hectare, said S Murugan, deputy director of horticulture department at Theni. However, the department couldn’t document the feat on time for a mention in record books. The harvest should have been calculated by the horticulture and statistics departments, he said.

Theni production is a record by all means as Maharashtra with its alternating cold and hot climates could not have exceeded 75 tonnes per hectare, Murugan said.

The official cited the case of one farmer Gurunathan and his son Loganathan who took up banana cultivation using tissue culture saplings. They relied on drip irrigation and reaped over 120 tonnes per hectare. “These farmers also provided nutrients and fertilizers in measured amounts,” Murugan revealed, adding Gurunathan has completed about 70% of the harvest. “The yield may go up to 150 tonnes per hectare at the end,” he said.

Theni district, which has a conducive climate for banana cultivation, has 8,000 hectares under the crop. A green banana variety known as Grand Naine is cultivated by many farmers here. About 90 tonnes is the average production at many farms.

It is Maharashtra that holds the record for the highest production per hectare of 68 tonnes. The horticulture department is planning to organise a competition for the banana farmers after January, he added.

source: http://www.articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Madurai> Tonnes / by Padmini Sivarajah, TNN / January 05th, 2014

Organic farming scientist Nammalvar dead

G. Nammalvar / The Hindu
G. Nammalvar / The Hindu

G. Nammalvar (75), organic farming scientist and crusader, died at Pichinikadu village near Pattukottai on Monday night.

Born at Elankadu village near Thiruvaiyaru in 1938, he graduated in agriculture from Annamalai University. In 1963, he joined as an officer in the Agricultural Regional Research Centre, Kovilpatti.

Later he served as an agronomist in Island Peace, an organisation founded by Nobel Laureate R.P. Dominic Pyre. All his life, he championed the cause of natural farming. Gandhigram Rural University honoured him with a doctorate.

A crusader against genetically modified crops, he was spearheading the movement against proposed methane project in Cauvery delta districts.

This article has been corrected for a typographical error.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National / Tamil Nadu / by Special Correspondent / Thanjavur – December 31st, 2013

Community groups and SHGs to maintain Tiruchi parks

FACE TO FACE: An AIADMK councillor speaking at the Tiruchirapalli City Corporation Council meeting on Friday. / Photo: A.Muralitharan / The Hindu
FACE TO FACE: An AIADMK councillor speaking at the Tiruchirapalli City Corporation Council meeting on Friday. / Photo: A.Muralitharan / The Hindu

They are allowed to collect user and entry fee; lights, gardens, amusement equipment, toilets lying in disuse

Tiruchirapalli City Corporation Council on Friday decided to hand over maintenance of public parks in the city to community groups and women self-help groups.

A decision to this effect was taken at an urgent meeting of the council with A. Jaya, Mayor, in the chair. Conceding the need to improve the upkeep of the public parks in the city, an official resolution that was approved by the council, said the infrastructure such as lights, gardens, amusement equipment, and toilets have been lying in disuse in many of the parks because of the absence of personnel to maintain them.

The corporation now plans to identify community (comprising residents of the respective areas) or self-help groups to maintain the parks. Initially, the parks would be handed over to the groups for maintenance for three years. The civic body would post watch and ward staff and groups would be vested with the task of maintaining the parks, including the gardens and other infrastructure. The corporation will not pay the groups any salary.

However, they may be gradually allowed to collect a user fee of Rs. 50 a month or Rs. 2 a person as entry fee to the parks. The groups will be allowed to put up milk kiosks through Aavin or other agencies.

The council approved a resolution to relocate all the 66 traders of the Vazhakkai Mandi functioning adjacent to Gandhi Market, to the Viragupettai Overhead Drinking Water Tank complex, where the necessary infrastructure will be developed.

Answering a query from M. Mohamed Mustafa of Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, Corporation Commissioner V.P. Thandapani said the OHT complex had adequate space to accommodate the traders.

The council gave its nod for constructing a new commercial complex by demolishing the diamond jubilee building, an old toilet complex, a two-wheeler parking lot, and a few shops in front of Gandhi Market as part of the civic body’s initiative to renovate and redevelop the market.

However, the move was strongly opposed by Syed Ibrahim (independent), who sought to know the fate of the 200-odd traders currently at the diamond jubilee building and wondered whether they would be allotted space at the new building or given alternative sites. Corporation officials contended that no trader had been allotted shops at the building and only platform shopkeepers were allowed to carry on their business there on a first-come-first-served basis every day.

Mr. Thandapani said measures were aimed at relieving the congestion around the market. However, alleging irregularities in the move, Mr. Ibrahim staged a walkout from the meeting.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Tiruchirapalli / December 28th, 2013

IFGTB’s afforestation initiatives in mine spoils lauded

Dumping of mine spoils has always been a problem for health and environment. / Photo: Special Arrangement / The Hindu
Dumping of mine spoils has always been a problem for health and environment. / Photo: Special Arrangement / The Hindu

The drive was carried out near mines in Yercaud, Salem and Coimbatore

Afforestation initiatives in mine spoils in Salem and Coimbatore districts carried out by the Institute of Forest Genetics and Tree Breeding (IFGTB) during the period 2002-06 has been lauded by the National Afforestation and Eco-Development Board under the Union Ministry of Environment and Forests in a documentary film.

The Director of IFGTB, N. Krishna Kumar, said that reclamation of mine spoil land, rehabilitation and restoration of de-graded areas has come in for appreciation. IFGTB carried out the drive in one hectare in areas closer to bauxite mine near Yercaud, in two hectares near magnesite mine in Salem and another two hectares near the lime stone mine in Coimbatore.

Mine spoils is a mixture of minerals, metals, rock fragments, and sub-soils that result from surface mining operations. Dumping of mine spoils had always been a problem for health and environment. To ameliorate the mine spoils, top spoil is spread over it before planting saplings, because top soil has good structure, water holding capacity and beneficial microbes which are very essential for plant growth.

Suitable tree species such as Acacia Auriculformis, Casuarina equisetfolie and Gmelina were inoculated with culture beneficial microbes such as Arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, Rhizobium Phospobacterium and Azospirillum and then grown in collected mine spoils as potting media.

Seedlings grown in mine spoils with these bio-fertilisers have been improved in terms of growth and biomass. Thus, quality improved seedlings with bio-fertilisers were directly transplanted at the sites.

After this, growth and survival rate are monitored on an annual basis. Seedlings inoculated with beneficial microbes had higher growth and survival rate.

Method of using beneficial microbes for afforestation in mine spoils is cost effective and environment friendly. The reclaimed and rehabilitated sites are fast restoring, increasing the bio-diversity by attracting host of insects, butterflies and birds.

Ecological engineering using soil microbes is a sure way to restore the degraded areas in which public participation is essential, Mr.Krishna Kumar added. Now, IFGTB has specialised teams in the area of mine spoil restoration.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Coimbatore / by V. S.  Palaniappan / Coimbatore – December 21st, 2013

Cuddalore farmer bags national award for successful country chicken farming

Cuddalore :

A small-time poultry farmer in Cuddalore district was among the first to predict that those investing in finance companies to rear emu birds would be in deep trouble. Having visited an emu farm in a village near Guntur, Andhra Pradesh way back in 1990, Cuddalore-based farmer R Kathamuthu, 45 was convinced that the there was no profit in rearing emus.

He advised several farmers not to invest in emu. A few took him seriously and did not burn their fingers, but the rest suffered huge losses. But, Kathamuthu, who hails from Old Vandipalayam, was selected for an award for the year 2013 for promoting country chicken or ‘naatu kozhi’ in local parlance.

The Chandigarh-based central poultry development organization (CPDO) gave him the national award, recognizing his contribution in the field of ‘desi’ chicken. The CPDO functions under the department of animal husbandry, dairy and fisheries, ministry of agriculture.

Joint secretary (animal husbandry, dairying and fisheries) Sanjay Bose Reddy presented the award to him in the presence of CPDO director K Ravikumar and its Chennai research centre director, P Kanagaraj, at a function on December 12 in Chandigarh. Son of an agricultural coolie S Ramalingam, Kathamuthu was into aqua culture, farming fish and crustaceans, before taking up poultry farming full time. “Aquaculture is a profitable business but very labour-intensive. It is a huge task to maintain the facility,” Kathamuthu said. An article about CPDO’s research centre in Hessaraghatta, Bangalore, in an agriculture magazine, which he came upon accidentally, changed the course of his life. He visited the centre and underwent a week-long training in poultry farming. It was the beginning of a new life for him.

He set up a country chicken farm with an investment of Rs 50,000 in his village in 2000. With tips from the research centre, he developed his farm in a phased manner. His business peaked in the last couple of years, during which he sold more than 2,500 birds every month. The demand for country chicken eggs also soared and he began to sell more than 500 eggs per day at Rs 5 per egg. His clients included hotels from Bangalore, Chennai, Madurai, Trichy and Salem, besides locals. He used to earn more than Rs 1 lakh per month when his business was at a peak.

“The broiler chicken market is volatile. The price of chicken and eggs fluctuate. But there is always great demand for country chicken and eggs,” he said. His wife, K Inbavalli, and his brother-in-law, A Ramadoss, assist him in maintaining the farm. He trains college students and encourages them to set up poultry farms.

source: http://www.articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City>Chennai> Cuddalore / by Bosco Dominique, TNN / December 17th, 2013

Creation of Hasanur Forest Division makes monitoring effective in STR

There will be 150 anti-poaching watchers for STR: 90 for Sathy division and the rest for Hasanur Division./ File Photo / The Hindu
There will be 150 anti-poaching watchers for STR: 90 for Sathy division and the rest for Hasanur Division./ File Photo / The Hindu

With the newly-created Hasanur Forest Division taking formal shape, the department is able to plan effective monitoring in the cross-border areas of Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve (STR) with relative ease, according to officials.

The department is in a position to bolster manpower by inducting more anti-poaching watchers chosen from among locals in the forest area with innate knowledge of the terrain. There will be 150 anti-poaching watchers for STR: 90 for Sathy division and the rest for Hasanur Division.

Camps for anti-poaching watchers with monitoring equipment would be established in cross-border areas to prevent movement of poachers. Patrolling by anti-poaching watchers in areas specified to each individual could be read with GPS technology, Conservator of Forests and Field Director, Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve, I. Anwardin, said.

The divisional and range level officers would be able to address ground-level issues more effectively, he said.

The new division was carved out of the Sathyamangalam Forest Division that had jurisdiction over 1.4 lakh hectares of forest area. More attention could henceforth be provided to Thengumarada landscape, said Mr. Anwardin. Sathyamangalam forest division was the largest in Tamil Nadu before bifurcation was effected. Alongside the ranges of Hasanur, Thalavadi and Germalam altogether spread over about 50,000 hectares, the Hasanur Division has eco-development and Forest Squad ranges as well. The rest of the forest area comes under four ranges of Sathyamangalam Division including Bhavani Sagar and T.N. Palayam ranges. Rangers of territorial ranges can hereafter focus exclusively on the main task of tiger conservation, and preventing cross-border movement of poachers, Deputy Director of STR P. Pari said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Madurai / by R Krishnamoorthy / Erode – December 16th, 2013

Chetpet lake will soon be a fishing, boating centre

Chennai :

You could soon spend the day fishing at Chetput lake and relaxing on its banks. The fisheries department and the corporation are working on a plan to turn the lake in the heart of the city into a boating and fishing centre.

People can bring their own fishing poles or rent them and park themselves on the dock for a while. “They will have to release the fish they catch back into the lake after taking a photograph. Fishing is on a CPR basis — catch, picture and release. The whole sport and thrill should be about the catch,” said a fisheries department official. “We will provide bait like small fishes, worms and caterpillars,” said the official.

Nine months ago, the state government announced a 42-crore makeover for the lake. Though the water remains blackish after the clean-up, officials and consultants are happy with the work. “We have been asked to create an eco-friendly fishing spot-cum-sports park,” said a senior corporation official in charge of the project. “We plan to introduce boating for recreation on the eastern side of the park. Around 70% of the water will be dedicated to it,” he said.
Until now, people from the city interested in a boating trip had to drive all the way to Muttukadu on East Coast Road or to Pulicat.

The area surrounding the lake will have a food court with sea food, a children’s play area and park, a walking and jogging track and a multi-level parking lot for 60 cars and 100 two-wheelers.

The government plans an angler’s dock on the Spurtank Road side of the lake. The fisheries department will start farming two omnivorous species – karimeen (etro fish) and Pangasius – for angling. “We need fish species that are carnivorous or omnivorous, so that they get attracted to the bait,” said the official.

The lake now has three omnivorous species – tilapia, snakehead fish and catfish – of which only tilapia is easily seen. “Snakehead fish and catfish can be caught in summer when the lake’s depth reduces to seven feet,” said an employee of the department. “We need to increase their population through farming.”

The lake spread over 42,570 sqm is home to many herbivorous varieties of freshwater fish like carp like rohu, mrigal and anabus, ornamental fish like gourami, and small fish like gambusia.
Until now, the lake and its surrounding area, spread over 65,235 sqm hectares, were used as a dumpyard and a sewer. “After it was cleaned, we can see the greenery around the lake and the water clearly after two decades,” said Nikkita Talreja, 24, a wedding planner who lives in Chetpet. “Earlier, swarms of mosquitoes would descend on the area every evening because of the filthy lake.”

Though tenders for the project are to be floated within a fortnight, officials admit they have a challenge on their hands to improve the quality of water. “Before we start planting fish seeds, which are baby fish bought from the hatcheries, we should try oxygenating the water a little more,” said another fisheries department official. “We should make the soil and water a little more organic. We should also aerate the water through fountains to keep it circling and prevent stagnation,” she said.

The water in the lake stagnates and smells because it has no outlet. “The corporation has promised to construct stormwater drains leading in and out of the lake,” said the official. A compound wall is to be constructed where the lake borders Chetpet slum and Kilpauk Medical College and Hospital to prevent dumping of garbage and hospital waste. “They are the main culprits behind the pollution. An eco-friendly area can be achieved only if garbage dumping stops,” added the official.

source: http://www.economictimes.indiatimes.com / The Economic Times / ET Home> Environment> Flora & Fauna / by Pratiksha Ramkumar, TNN / December 19th, 2013

Manna from heaven for samba and thaladi crops

The Hindu Heavy rain continued for the second day on Friday in Thanjavur and Tiruvarur. / Photo: B. Velankanni Raj / The Hindu
The Hindu Heavy rain continued for the second day on Friday in Thanjavur and Tiruvarur. / Photo: B. Velankanni Raj / The Hindu

Thanjavur and Tiruvarur districts continued to experience heavy rain for the second day on Friday.

“We have received less than normal rainfall so far under the northeast monsoon. So, the welcome rain is good for both samba and thaladi crops,” officials said. Samba and thaladi have been raised on nearly 2.50 lakh hectares in both districts.

Thanjavur town experienced the maximum rainfall of 42.8 mm in Thanjavur district in the last 24 hours that ended at 8 a.m. on Friday. The other chief amounts of rainfall recorded in the district are:

Manjalaru 22.8; Papanasam 22; Neivasal Thenpathi 20.8; Tiruvaiyaru 20.4; Vallam 20; Kumbakonam 19; Tirukattupalli 18.5; Tiruvidaimaruthur 18.3; Grand Anicut 17.4; Peravurani 17.2; Budalur 14; Eachanviduthi 16.2; Kurungulam 13, Lower Anicut 12, Pattukottai 10; Adirampattinam 9.5; Madukkur 9.2; Orathanad 6.4; and Vettikadu 6.3.

In Tiruvarur district, Kodaval received the maximum rainfall of 55.6 mm during the same period, followed by Tiruvarur 25.4; Valangaiman 25.2; Needamangalam 20; Nannilam 18.4; Tiruthuraipoondi 13.4; Pandavaiyar head 13.4; Muthupettai 11.6.

Sirkazhi recorded the maximum rainfall of 27.2 mm in Nagapattinam district, followed by Anaikarachathiram 25.5; Tirupoondi 24.4; Nagapattinam 19.8; Mayiladuthurai 19.6; Thalaignayar 18.8; Manalmedu 15.8; Vedaranyam 9; Tarangampadi 5.

In Perambalur district, Venbavur recorded 21 mm, Thazhuthazai 12 mm; Chettikulam 9 mm; and Padalur 7 mm.

Karur district received a total of 222.60 mm rainfall during the same period. The chief amount of rainfall (in mm) recorded in major centres across the district are Palaviduthi 30, Mylampatti 27, Kadavur and Anaipalayam 25 each, Aravakurichi 21.6, Panjapatti 21, Thogamalai 19, K. Paramathi 12.6, Karur town 12.4, Krishnarayapuram 12, Mayanur 10 and Kulithalai 7 mm.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> National> Tamil Nadu / by Special Correspondent / Thanjavur – December 14th, 2013

Time to talk about the art of Sujok

International Sujok Association (ISA) India, is going to conduct Sujok International Congress 2014 (SIC 2014) at Chennai Trade Centre, Nandambakkam on January 4 and 5, 2014.

Sujok is the Korean healing practice which does not have any side effects. It helps the human beings to gain healing power by activating the pressure points in the hands and feet.

Complete Sujok course, Smile Tai Chi, Six Ki Acupuncture, Tri Origin Acupuncture, Complete Correspondence System, Sujok Ki, Time Acupuncture and many more topics are planned for the event which will have a research paper presentation also.

For registration and further details, please call 9841175385, 9094018797 or log on to www.sujokinternationalcongress.com.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Chennai / by Express News Service – Chennai / December 12th, 2013