C. R. Narayan Rao Explained

C.R. Narayan Rao
Birth Date:1882 8, df=yes
Occupation:Scientist

C.R. Narayan Rao (15 August 1882  - 2 January 1960) was an Indian zoologist and herpetologist. He was among the founding editors of the journal Current Science. In recognition of his pioneering work on Indian amphibians, the genus Raorchestes was named after him.

Background

Born in Coimbatore, he studied in Bellary and at the Madras Christian College under Professor Henderson who headed the department of zoology. After obtaining his graduate and post-graduate degrees and a gold medal for proficiency, he obtained a diploma in teaching. He taught in Coimbatore and Ernakulam, before moving to the Central College in Bangalore where he organized the department of zoology and headed it until his retirement in 1937.[1]

Contributions

His role in science and research is considered significant since he was involved in the integration of research into university education. Along with Sir Martin Onslow Forster and other Indian scientists he helped found the journal Current Science in July 1932 along the lines of the journal Nature. He was its first editor. In one of his first editorials, he pleaded for the coordination of scientific activities in India, a plea that helped create the Indian Academy of Sciences.[2]

Professor Rao specialized on frogs and their taxonomy. He named and described several frog species, and his work on the Archenteric and Segmentation Cavities of frogs are regarded as important contributions to our understanding of amphibian development. He described the new Microhylid genus Ramanella. The genus Raorchestes is named in his honour.[3]

Professor Rao presided over the zoology section of the Indian Science Congress in 1938 at Lahore. His account of the ovarian ovum of the slender loris was presented to the Royal Society by James Peter Hill in the latter's Croonian Lecture.

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Notes and References

  1. Current Science. Seshachar, B.R.. Obituary. Professor C.R. Narayan Rao. 173. 1960. 29. 5.
  2. Current Science: some early history. Krishnan, Riki & P. Balaram. 129– . Current Science. 92-138. 1. 2007.
  3. Biju. S. D.. Yogesh Shouche . Alain Dubois . S. K. Dutta . Franky Bossuyt . 2010. A ground-dwelling rhacophorid frog from the highest mountain peak of the Western Ghats of India. Current Science. 98. 8. 1119–1125.