Modadugu Gupta

Indian scientist
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Quick Facts
Born:
Aug. 17, 1939, Bapatla, Andhra Pradesh, India (age 85)
Subjects Of Study:
aquaculture

Modadugu Gupta (born Aug. 17, 1939, Bapatla, Andhra Pradesh, India) is an Indian scientist, who boosted food yields in impoverished areas with innovative approaches to aquaculture.

Gupta earned a doctorate from the University of Calcutta and joined the Indian Council of Agricultural Research as a research associate. He later began a longtime association with the WorldFish Center, eventually serving as the organization’s assistant director general. In the 1970s, at a time when intense harvesting by commercial fishing fleets had caused a serious decline in the world’s wild fish stock, Gupta began introducing his aquaculture methods to poor farmers in India, demonstrating to them how they could easily integrate aquaculture into their routines. Freshwater fish production in the country soon more than doubled.

Gupta subsequently became a leading figure in the so-called Blue Revolution, the expansion of fish farming that was credited with improving the nutrition and enhancing the livelihoods of the rural poor through the spread of techniques that could significantly boost food production. Many of these techniques had been pioneered by Gupta. They included breeding species of carp that are adaptable to a variety of harsh environments, using common farm wastes such as weeds and chicken manure as fish food, and converting flooded fields and other seasonal water bodies into places to grow fish. Some areas of South and Southeast Asia where Gupta had worked with local farmers experienced as much as fivefold increases in fish harvests.

Michael Faraday (L) English physicist and chemist (electromagnetism) and John Frederic Daniell (R) British chemist and meteorologist who invented the Daniell cell.
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From 1986 to 1995 Gupta worked with the Bangladesh Fisheries Research Institute. His efforts in Bangladesh were notable for his involvement of rural women, who traditionally were limited to working inside the home. With the help of local nongovernmental organizations, Gupta persuaded many women to start small fish farms in their areas. He also helped spread aquaculture in Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Some critics objected to Gupta’s work on the basis that fish farming posed environmental as well as health hazards. Gupta conceded that some farmers overused fish feed and fertilizer, but he said that the solution was to educate these farmers in proper aquaculture techniques. He also insisted that aquaculture was meeting a crucial need as the world’s wild fish stock dwindled. Gupta saw great potential for aquaculture in Africa, and by 2006 he was advising a number of countries there. For his decades of effort and research in aquaculture, Gupta was awarded the international World Food Prize in October 2005.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.