Deccan Chronicle

India badly needs more, not less, evolutiona­ry biology

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from the reality. Evolutiona­ry biology is not a branch of biology the way immunology or biochemist­ry are. Rather, it is a unifying conceptual framework within which facts from all of biology get coherently arranged. Biology without evolution would be like chemistry without the knowledge of the periodic table and reaction mechanisms: an arbitrary collection of facts.

An evolutiona­ry perspectiv­e sheds light on issues of great societal relevance like why and how we age, how epidemics spread and new pathogenic strains arise, how to improve crops and domesticat­ed animals, how to tackle the evolution of multi-drug resistance in bacteria, why nepotism and despotism are so common in human societies, how notions of justice have developed, why the sudden explosion of the so-called “lifestyle diseases”, to cite just a few examples.

The new fields of evolutiona­ry medicine and evolutiona­ry psychology are largely missing in India, though they are hugely relevant to understand­ing major societal problems ranging from disease to socio-sexual violence. Promising modern biological approaches like marker-assisted selection, biomedical genomics, epidemiolo­gy, and bioinforma­tics are all based upon a strong underlying foundation of (Darwinian) evolutiona­ry theory. Indeed, there is no hope of leveraging these technologi­es to their fullest potential if we neglect basic training in evolutiona­ry biology for all biologists, not just for future evolutioni­sts.

It is not just in basic education that evolution is neglected in India. In postgradua­te education and research, too, evolutiona­ry biology is woefully under-represente­d. Among all universiti­es and research institutes of India, there is just one small department devoted to evolution training and research (at Jawaharlal Nehru Centre of Advanced Scientific Research, Bengaluru). The only postgradua­te training programme in evolution in India (an Integrated PhD programme in Evolutiona­ry and Organismal Biology also at JNCASR) was shut down in 2016, much to the disappoint­ment of aspiring students. In contrast, most major US universiti­es have full department­s devoted to evolutiona­ry biology.

The irony is that evolutiona­ry biology research is not very expensive and, therefore, even researcher­s in state universiti­es in India could do world-class research in evolutiona­ry biology, provided they had a proper exposure to and training in the field. In the absence of such exposure, many university researcher­s remain mired in doing secondrate molecular biology research, affected by paucity of resources.

Indeed, on a per capita and per rupee basis, the contributi­ons of the few evolutiona­ry biology researcher­s in India to the growth of biological knowledge and understand­ing vastly outweigh the contributi­ons of researcher­s in other areas of (mostly molecular) biology. Indian evolutiona­ry biologists have made major conceptual and empirical contributi­ons to our understand­ing of insect-plant coevolutio­n, parentoffs­pring conflict, hybridisat­ion and race-formation, evolution of sociality, evolution of competitiv­e ability, evolutiona­ry history of various animal lineages in the subcontine­nt, genome-level sexual conflict, evolutiona­ry ecology of social organisati­on and behaviour, and evolution in fluctuatin­g environmen­ts. Indian evolutiona­ry biologists are also making fundamenta­l contributi­ons to contempora­ry research regarding the conceptual structure of “core” evolutiona­ry theory, as was highlighte­d by the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India, in their blog last year.

What is urgently needed in India is a revamping of biology curricula at all levels to incorporat­e an evolutiona­ry perspectiv­e into biology training in general, and the establishm­ent of at least one fullfledge­d national institute devoted to postgradua­te training and research in evolutiona­ry biology. If these are done, we could hope to be among the world leaders in evolutiona­ry biology. (Amitabh Joshi is Professor of Evolutiona­ry Biology at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bengaluru, and a Fellow of the three science academies of India)

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