From washing take a look at tubes within the Nineties to pioneering phytoremediation options for heavy steel air pollution, plant scientist Dr Smitha Hegde has carved a major path within the fields of plant molecular biology, environmental conservation, and training.
A distinguished professor and deputy director at Nitte College Centre for Science Training and Analysis (NUCSER), Mangaluru, Dr Hegde is thought for her Tree Depend Report-2023, that turned the heads of coverage makers, and environmentalists amongst others. A year-long research revealed an alarming 6.24 per cent depletion of inexperienced cowl in city areas of Mangaluru, and a five-degree Celsius rise in floor temperature over a decade.
Dr Hegde’s story begins in Mumbai, the place she earned an MSc in Zoology in 1991. A accident introduced her to Mangaluru, the place she answered a newspaper commercial for a lab assistant at St Aloysius Faculty.
“My first job was to clean take a look at tubes,” she recollects. Beneath the mentorship of Fr. Leo D’Souza, a pioneer in plant tissue tradition, discovered her calling. She contributed to India’s first test-tube cashew plant and, by 1998, earned a PhD in Biosciences from Mangalore College, specializing in propagating native decorative crops like ferns. “I shifted from zoology to crops and I’ve by no means appeared again,” she says.
Her fascination with ferns—or pteridophytes—defines her profession. These historical crops, the primary to transition from water to land, gripped her consideration with their toughness and huge genomes. “They survived hostile circumstances—volcanoes, excessive CO2, low oxygen,” she explains. “Their genes maintain secrets and techniques we’re solely starting to know.”
At NUCSER, the place she joined in 2017, Dr Hegde has printed over 67 journal papers and 32 guide chapters, exploring ferns’ potential in phytoremediation—utilizing crops to strip heavy metals like lead and cadmium from soil and water. Her two pending patents purpose to harness biomaterials for cleaner ingesting water, addressing a urgent trendy disaster: heavy steel contamination in greens.
Her lab is full of tissue-cultured ferns, grown on minimal media to check their steel tolerance. This work isn’t simply educational—it’s private. She avoids crops within the meals chain for remediation, making certain toxins don’t cycle again to people. “Docs all the time say eat greens, proper? However now we’re shocked to see the quantity of heavy metals which can be there within the greens—arsenic, chromium, lead. After we devour these crops, it will get into us, and we additionally wouldn’t have a correct mechanism to throw it out of the physique. It performs a whole lot of havoc,” she says.
Additional, her 2015 research in Kudremukh Nationwide Park, the place she and her scholar DNA-barcoded ferns throughout 600 km, revealed their range and fire-fuelling potential, aiding forest administration. Her publications, ranging over 77 with greater than 745 citations, embrace groundbreaking research like the usage of LEDs to spice up lipid manufacturing in microalgae for biofuels and the event of DNA barcodes for edible medicinal ferns.
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Dr Hegde’s ‘Tree Depend Report-Mangaluru 2023’ triggered requires city reforestation.
But, her curiosity runs deeper. She ponders why ferns carry flowering genes with out blooming and the way they sense altitude or revive from drought.
This formidable venture noticed her and 40 scholar volunteers manually rely 19,717 timber throughout 50 of Mangaluru’s 60 wards in public areas over a 12 months.
Funded by a modest Rs.1.5 lakh grant from Nitte College, the report maps timber by species, biomass, and carbon sequestration (2.5 million kilos yearly), utilizing GPS tagging and Excel sheets. It aimed to tell coverage with out fault-finding. “It took me one 12 months… each morning, each vacation morning, counting 19,717 timber throughout 50 wards. It’s pure information to inform Mangalore residents, ‘Look, you are able to do one thing.’ The hidden curriculum is to familiarise Gen Subsequent with timber —it’s been like a tapasya to finish this process,” she says.
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She envisions extending it to the remaining 10 wards and integrating expertise like drones and laptop imaginative and prescient for effectivity.
Her report reveals Mangaluru’s public inexperienced cowl at 6.24%, with solely 0.01 timber per particular person in some wards (one of many wards had 125 timber for 11,069 individuals). “Mangalore is inexperienced… due to non-public individuals,” she observes, cautioning that non-public land gross sales threaten this buffer.
She notes, “India goes via a disaster of desertification the place 30% of its land is changing into unproductive… simply due to the dearth of moisture and warmth.”
In Mangaluru, she stories a 2024 floor temperature peak of 47°C and a 1.5°C common rise over 10 years, linking it to concretization and tree loss. “You’d suppose it occurs solely within the deserts,” she says.
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he laments Mangaluru’s transformation right into a “Concrete Jungle,” warning it may mirror Bangalore’s ecological decline: “Bangalore is an ecological catastrophe… it’s not sustainable anymore.” She cites native examples of Mangaluru the place “virtually all of the timber on the roadside have gone” as a result of Good Metropolis tasks.
“Subsequent time you see a plant, go searching with the eyes of respect and curiosity and humility to know that we don’t know the whole lot concerning the plant system.We don’t want to avoid wasting the setting—it will possibly save itself. We want not intrude with them, that’s it.” says Dr Hegde.