The Hindu (Bangalore)

Bengalurub­ased academicia­n launches digital database of flora of India

Dr. Sankara Rao, Visiting Professor and Distinguis­hed Fellow at the Centre for Ecological Sciences, IISc, Bengaluru, talks about how he came to collate this unique database

- Preeti Zachariah

Dr. Sankara Rao has been fascinated by plants for as long as he can remember. “When someone scolded me at home, I would go sit on a guava tree, eat fruits and refuse to come home,” says Rao, who grew up in a densely vegetated part of Kakinada in East Godavari District, Andhra Pradesh. He remembers playing amidst the trees, jumping from branch to branch, spending so much time on them that when his father returned home from work and asked his mother about her son, her standard response would be that he was on a tree. “I think it is inborn,” says Rao, who is all set to launch India Flora Online, a digital database of the flora of India, the only such of its kind in the country.

India Flora Online, which also includes a record of plants from Afghanista­n, Nepal, Tibet, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Pakistan, is the fourth such plant database initiative he has been instrument­al in launching, following Digital Flora of Karnataka (2014), Digital Flora of Eastern Ghats (2019), and Flora of Peninsular India (2019). “I have been working day and night on this,” says Rao, pointing out that having an easily accessible resource such as this will offer people knowledge about every plant in the country. “This fulfils the country’s need to bring its plant wealth into one searchable source,” he believes.

Starting a herbarium

Rao, Visiting Professor and Distinguis­hed Fellow at the Centre for Ecological Sciences (CES), Indian Institute of Science (IISc), has been in charge of the herbarium at CES for around 17 years. It is his “postretire­ment work,” he says. He took on the role after he retired from IISc’s Biochemist­ry Department in 2001, after working there for nearly 20 years. “Biochemist­ry is, after all, the functionin­g of the biological systems, a manifestat­ion of life.” He spent the first three years after retirement as an Emeritus Professor before joining CES to take care of the department’s herbarium (a collection of plant samples preserved by drying and pressing for longterm study), incidental­ly one which he had been instrument­al in starting decades ago. “I was one of the cofounders of the Herbarium JCB with

Father Cecil Saldanha,” says Rao, recounting how the two began developing the collection at St. Joseph’s College in Bengaluru when they worked together in the 1960s and 70s.

Expedition­s around Bengaluru

Rao was already part of St. Joseph’s Botany Department when Father Saldanha joined it in 1964 after working at St. Xavier’s College in Mumbai (then Bombay). “He came with a specialisa­tion in Botany and wanted to continue his research in it,” says Rao. He adds that Saldanha was looking for an associate who was also interested in plants and plant taxonomy when he arrived at St. Joseph’s. “He wanted someone with a similar thinking. He found one in me,” he says.

He recalls how the two of them would go on expedition­s in and around Bengaluru every weekend, collecting all kinds of plants and even purchasing a used jeep that they used on these journeys. “In those days, the suburbs in Bangalore were all forest,” says Rao, pointing out that the Bannerghat­ta Forest used to start near the MICO factory back then. “Bannerghat­ta, which is in the southern part of the Deccan, was where we collected a lot of plants,” he says, rememberin­g how they even encountere­d wild animals, especially bears, on these trips. “I used to spend much of my spare time with him (Father Saldhana),” he says. Cut to the year 1984. Father Saldanha, who had retired from St. Joseph’s at the age of 60, joined IISc, bringing his herbarium collection with him. “He was invited by Madhav Gadgil, the founder of the CES department,” says Rao. Sadly, Saldanha passed away less than two years after that, leaving behind this collection of around 16,000 specimens. “They did not know what to do with it, so they came to me,” says Rao, who took on the responsibi­lity of managing the plant collection completely in 2007.

Since then, the collection has grown in size and scope, now boasting about 22,000 specimens collected from all over the subcontine­nt. In 2014, he realised that this informatio­n needed to be in the public domain; so he created the first comprehens­ive online database, Digital Flora of

Karnataka, which provides details around 4,918 species. The details include the plant’s scientific and common names in English and vernacular languages, informatio­n about its taxonomy, key identification features, and geographic distributi­on, besides images of the herbarium sheet from the CES collection, as well as its photograph­s from the field.

Why document?

Digital Flora of Eastern Ghats and Flora of Peninsular India, both released in 2019, list 4,097 and 10,210 species, while the most recent–India Flora Online–has details of a whopping 15,349 plants found across India. “I have worked only on higher groups of plants: angiosperm­s (flowering plants), gymnosperm­s (conebearin­g plants) and ferns,” says Rao, who has yet to document fungi, algae and lichens. “I have my limitation­s,” he admits.

According to the Conservati­on Internatio­nal website, biodiversi­ty hotspots are “places on earth that are both biological­ly rich and deeply threatened.” To qualify as one, a site must meet two criteria: It must have at least 1,500 endemic vascular plants (those with veins to conduct food and nutrients), making it extremely unique, and needs to possess less than 30% of its original natural vegetation, indicating that it is highly endangered.

Of the 36 global biodiversi­ty hotspots, regions uniquely rich in plant and animal life, four major ones are located in India — the Himalayas, the IndoBurma Region, the Western Ghats, and Sundaland – making the country a treasure trove of natural wealth. “India harbours some major biodiversi­ty hotspots,” says Rao, pointing out, however, that collated informatio­n about our plant wealth is still lacking.

In the absence of sufficient data about this natural heritage, “people often don’t know what is what; what we have lost and what we are left with,” he says. “We need to have a reference point.” Having this data, particular­ly on a searchable online database, can go a long way towards conserving ecosystems, benefiting the natural world and indigenous people who depend on these systems for their livelihood, enhancing plant diversity and preserving the germplasm of our cultivated plants, among other things. “It will help to manage, monitor and preserve what we are left with,” he believes.

India Flora Online will be launched at IISc’s Faculty Hall, Main Building, on Monday, April 8. The event is open to all.

 ?? ?? Floral diversity in a lateritic plateau.
Floral diversity in a lateritic plateau.
 ?? ?? India Flora Online, the digital database of the flora of India.
India Flora Online, the digital database of the flora of India.
 ?? ?? Sankara Rao
Sankara Rao

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