Sir E.J. Butler Memorial Award

(13.08.1874 – 04.04.1943)

Edwin John Butler was born on 13th August 1874 in Kilkee, Co. Clare where his father was the local Magistrate. He studied medicine at Queen's College Cork (now University College Cork) and graduated in 1898. He had a remarkable career which saw the Irishman traveling the globe and becoming a plant pathologist of international renown. In Cork, he came under the influence of Prof. Marcus Hartog who was Professor of Natural History and later Professor of Zoology at the college. Hartog was interested in the mechanics of Saprolegnia, a genus of water-moulds which he collected from ponds including that in the lower grounds of the college (where the Glucksman Gallery now stands). Butler began to use similar techniques to study the neighbouring genus Pythium. Butler went on to study in Paris and London before being appointed as Imperial Mycologist to India in 1906. His work on aquatic Phycomycetes in India as well as his classical studies on the diseases of palms and sugarcane, on wilt of pigeon peas, on wheat rusts, on downy mildews and much more mean that he is regarded as the "Father of Indian Plant Pathology". He was responsible for categorising nearly 150 species of plant pathogenic fungi.

In 1918, he published 'Fungi and Disease in Plants' on Indian plant diseases. He later adapted this book for a European audience and ‘Plant Pathology' was published a number of years after his death in collaboration with S.G. Jones. It was the classic plant pathology textbook of its time.

Butler left India in 1921 and took up Directorship of the newly established Imperial Bureau of Mycology at Kew, London where he continued his work and became a distinguished figure in the world of plant pathology; travelling widely and founding a number of new journals. Butler was Knighted in 1939.

Sir Edwin John Butler died of influenza on 4th,April 1943 in Surrey. In Butler's obituary, EW Mason notes that "his most striking characteristic was perhaps his immense interest in fungi both as fungi and as the causal organisms of disease in plants, and coupled with this his power of transferring that interest to botanical and lay minds alike. His lifelong habit of wide and deep reading, linked with his accumulated personal experience, enabled him to present problems in their correct perspective and to recommend the line of attack that should best deserve success."

He is commemorated by a plaque at Kilkee Library, Co. Clare as well as the Butler Medal which is awarded by the Society of Irish Plant Pathologists to individuals who have made a significant contribution to the field. The Butler Building at University College Cork was built in 2000 and is also named in his honour. The Imperial Bureau of Mycology later formed part of the Commonwealth Agricultural Bureau which is now known as CABI and celebrated its centenary in 2010.


Prof. S.N.Banerjee Memorial Award Lecture organized by IMS, Kolkata

Date/year Name of awardee Title of Award Lecture
23.02. 2006 Prof Anupam Varma
Division of Plant Pathology
IARI, New Delhi
International symposium
19.12. 2008 Prof Arun K Chatterjee
Department of Plant Sciences
University of Missouri
Columbia, Missouri, USA
Manipulation of the quorum sensing signaling system in the management of the soft-rotting disease
04.12. 2009 Prof K R Aneja National symposium
02.02. 2012 Prof Rajendran National symposium
09.10.2012 Prof. N. Irabanta Singh
Dean, Faculty of Life Sciences
Manipur University, Imphal, Manipur
Certain aspects of wild edible fleshy fungi of Manipur
20.02. 2014 Prof A.N.Sabalpara
Dean, Department of Plant Pathology
Navsari Agricultural University
Navsari, Gujrat
Trichoderma – A fungi of high significance in Agriculture
10.09.2014 Prof A. K. Roy
Pro-Vice Chancellor
T.M.Bhagalpur University
Bhagalpur, Bihar
Present status of researches on mycorrhizal fungi and prospect in plant disease management
10.03. 2017 Dr. Someswar Bhagat
Senior Scientist(Plant Pathology)
ICAR-Central Rainfed Upland Rice Research Station, HAzaribag, Jharkhand
Plant diseases management by Trichoderma spp. – Potential and future scope
07.03. 2018 Prof Ajoy Krishna Saha
Department of Botany
Tripura University
Suryamaninager, Tripura
Fungal endophytes in plant health
06.02.2020 Prof. Narayan Chandra.Mandal
Department of Botany
Visva Bharati, Santiniketan
Phosphate (P) deficiency induced biofilm formation on insoluble P granules play a positive role in Burkholderia species for maximum release of soluble P.
20.03.2021 Prof. Krishnendu Acharya
Department of Botany
University of Calcutta
Spending 20 years with macrofungi of West Bengal
22.01.2022 Prof. R.N.Kharwar
CAS in Botany
Institute of Science
BHU, Varanasi
An exploration of unseen fungal world and analysis of their functional attributes in crop and human health
10.02.2023 Prof Amitava Basu
Department of Plant Pathology
BCKV, Mohanpur, Nadia
Current threats to plant bio—security and safeguards for trade and exchange programs as constraints for the export of Agriculture commodity
23.02.2024 Prof. Pranab Dutta
Central agricultural University (Imphal), Umiam, Meghalaya
Using green engineere nanoparticles for plant health management
06.12.2024 Dr. Alok K. Srivastava
Director, ICAR-National Bureau of Agriculturally Important Microorganisms (ICAR-NBAIM), Kushmaur Mau, UP
Genome Informatics: a perspective towards pathogenicity and diagnostics in fungi

Award Gallery