Green films for the masses

Films on environment and wildlife have come a long way in India in the last decade. Celluloid seems to be quite a medium of choice to take the message across. The film making format has also seen a change with many film makers changing over to new ways of storytelling.

However, documentary films screened at environment and wildlife film festivals, viewed by select audiences most of whom are already aware of  the issues, do not somehow seem to go beyond that mandate. Yes, the challenges to cross over to the other side, the mainstream, and be seen by the masses are many — no one goes to a movie theatre to be preached, they go there for entertainment.

Is there a middle path for environment & wildlife film makers? A still from 'Life of Pi'.{credit}Life of Pi movie/Flickr{/credit}

At the other end of the spectrum are big budget movies such as ‘Life of Pi’, which every middle class and upper class household in India worth its salt went to check out last weekend. The movie taught children a thing or two about animal behaviour and survival strategies (though many could scientifically challenge some of the films contents, specially the dream-like carnivorous island). Agreed that it takes one Ang Lee and truckloads of money to make such movies but the take home message here is the art of storytelling.

Is their a way of telling a story, beyond the documentary mode, that could perhaps make a movie much more ‘mainstream’? Why don’t more environment and wildlife film makers use innovative ways of telling stories? That, in no way, is intended to belittle the classic documentary format, which will forever continue to charm the more intellectually-oriented — the classes, as cinema lingo labels them. As for the masses, these festivals will perhaps need to reinvent themselves in form and tenor for people to sit up and take note.

The organisers of environment and wildlife film festivals seem to realise this and are struggling hard to reach their message across to more people every year.

One of the biggest film festivals in this genre in India — the multi-city traveling festival CMS Vatavaran that began in 2002 — boasted of 300 entries from 27 countries last year. It is still travelling this year with the theme ‘biodiversity conservation’ and is scheduled to screen films in the West Bengal capital Kolkata next week (December 3-8, 2012). Their theme was a good fit for Hyderabad’s COP-11 to the Convention on Biological Diversity, where they hosted the ‘International Biodiversity Film Festival’ with more than 50 Indian and international films on biodiversity issues.

The organisers say,”Ideals are abstract, but they are necessary, too. They can be transformed into a felt experience, but can get only as febrile as the passion that pushes it. The questions that provoked us a decade ago remain.”

Being screened in New Delhi next week is ‘Quotes from the Earth‘ (December 6-7, 2012), an environment film festival organised by advocacy group Toxics Link and India International Centre, Delhi. It will have about 25 films from across the world, some of which are currently on show at the more mainstream film event ‘International Film Festival of India (IFFI 2012) in Goa (November 20-30, 2012).

That brings us to films with overt or covert environment/wildlife themes being screened at the more talked about and attended IFFI, 2012. Of these films, just about a couple adopt the documentary-style story telling technique. While the Greek film ‘Boy eating Bird’s Food’ is the story of a boy and a canary bird with insights into the bird’s life, the Hebrew-Russian ‘Igor and the Crane’s Journey’ is the story of a father and son tracing the journey of migratory birds from Russia to Africa. English film ‘Salmon Fishing in the Yemen’ is a visionary sheikh’s passion for a peaceful pastime of salmon fishing and the ‘Last dogs of Winter’ tells the story of wild bears peacefully sharing a barren strip of coastal land with a large number of chained dogs during polar bear season in Manitoba, Canada. ‘Fogo’, featuring a small community in the Fogo island that is forced to leave as the tundras take over their habitats and ‘More than Honey’, a personal perspective of a beekeeper’s grandson in Switzerland, are a couple of others to mention.

Adopting the documentary style are Elemental (by Gayatri Roshan and Emmanuel Voughan-Lee) which narrates the journey of three people connected by their deep bond with nature and driven to confront some of the most pressing ecological challenges of our times, the Vidarbha farmer suicides story ‘Cotton for my Shroud’, and the self explanatory ‘Himachal’s Avian Paradise: Pong Dam Wildlife Sanctuary’ and ‘Mangroves: Guardian of the Coast’.

‘Tiger Dynasty’, a popular film in wildlife film circuit by director-producer-cinematographer S. Nallamuthu shows the life of a young tigress taken from her home in Ranthambore National Park and released in Sariska with the hope that she will raise a new dynasty there. The film maker has been filming the tigress ever since she was a cub and he reveals what challenges such displaced animals feel in their new environments. ‘Char: the No Man’s Land’, is an account of environment refugees from India and Bangladesh.

Girish Kasaravalli’s national award winning film from 2002 ‘Dweepa’ is also a refreshing entry — it deals with the issues of building dams and displacement of natives — with some master storytelling and camera.

I’m sure the issue has been debated in umpteen panel discussions, perhaps in these very film festivals, but it would be good to know what film makers in this genre think about marrying entertainment with hard-core information-packed story telling techniques?  Is there a middle path for environment and wildlife messages? Infotainment, without dumbing down the message? What are the cult movies in this genre, according to you?

Away from home: Where animals and reagents abound

Every Wednesday, our ‘Away from home’ blog series features one Indian postdoc working in a foreign lab recounting his/her experience of working there, the triumphs and challenges, the culture factor, tips for Indian postdocs headed abroad and what he/she misses most about India.

This week’s blog features Mainpal Rana, a PhD from the Biological Sciences and Bioengineering Department of Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur and currently a postdoctoral associate at the Magee-Womens Research Institute Pittsburgh affiliated to University of Pittsburgh, USA. He tells us the joys of not having to wait for reagents for experiments and the woes of not having Indian utensils in an American kitchen.

Mainpal Rana (extreme left) with his group members from the Magee-Womens Research Institute Pittsburgh.

Growing up with Nature

I was born and brought up in a village. My village Koyer in the Karnal district of Haryana was a rich habitat of living things. That included vegetation, insects, birds and other animals that were not only spread over the vast agricultural fields but also abounded in many ponds and a small forest. This enormous variation always intrigued me.

In school, science experiments were always exciting.  The drive to know how everything works was my biggest motivation for getting into science. As far as I can remember, I was always interested in science.

Looking at stem cells, genes

During my PhD, I tried to answer how germline stem cells maintain their identity using C. elegans as a model system. My interest to study the process of meiosis got me to my current lab in the Magee-Womens Research Institute Pittsburgh. Now, I am trying to understand the role of a gene for multiple defects during meiosis which result in aneuploidy (Down syndrome in human is an example of aneuploidy).

Model systems, reagents aplenty

The best thing about my lab is the availability of other model systems such as mice, rats and primates within the department where one can readily test the finding to make results more significant.  Further, laboratory reagents and enzymes don’t take much time to arrive here. Delay in the reagent availability was one of the biggest issues during my Ph.D. time in India. In addition, the quality of research as well as a huge research community to share research reagents make this place one of the best  to work in.

Some of the qualities of people in USA that I like most are honesty, independent life, responsibility and punctuality.

Harsh weather a minor detriment

It wasn’t a smooth transition for me when I came here from India but it was not very difficult either.  I was welcome by freezing cold and snow the day I arrived. I had never experienced such harsh weather before.  The clothes that I got from India were not good enough to save me from the bitter cold. Fortunately, my apartment was warm and cosy and the buses were also warm. So the only uncomfortable period was the time spent outside waiting for transportation, which was not very long.

The weather is one of the things that I don’t like here.  One thing that most Indians won’t like about apartments in USA is the kitchen – they are not designed for Indian cooking.

Credit card a must

Offices for international students in the universities usually have orientation programmes for new students to help them settle here. Some tips that I can offer from first-hand experience are:

1. Open a bank account and apply for credit card as soon as you can as most of your daily shopping would be through debit or credit card.

2. Plan ahead for clothing depending on which state in the US you are moving in to as some regions can be very cold here. Probably a good idea is to buy winter jackets and coats from the place where you are planning to move.

3. Indian kitchen utensils are not available everywhere. So it’s best to contact Indian friends living in the US to inquire about Indian stores.

Miss the festivals

I miss my family back in India the most. I also miss Indian festivals which were not only a reason to get together but also provided the company of family and friends. Also, the variety of sweets and special Indian food used to be things to cherish.

I’d definitely come back to India. In fact, I will soon start looking for jobs in India.

Award, just a wee bit nicer

Scientists and researchers, like people in any other profession, love a pat on the back. More so, since their perseverance is generally recognised only after long years of toil.

Awards go a long way to boost their morale, just like a publication or a patent does. And if the prize money is something to write home about, it is only too human to feel a wee bit nicer. A Nature India feature discusses how such high value awards are turning the spotlight back on science.

The biggest annual private sector award for science in India — the Infosys Prize — funded by the Infosys Science Foundation, were announced today. The award has attained a significant position in the annual science awards calendar in India, with a prize money of close to Rs 50 lakh recognising ‘outstanding research contributions’ in engineering and computer science, life sciences, mathematics, physical sciences, humanities and social sciences.

The humanities category was introduced this year to expand the scope of the prize.

Scientists in this year's Infosys Prize list (clockwise from top left): Ashish Lele, Ayyappanpillai Ajayaghosh, Manjul Bhargava & Satyajit Mayor

This year’s awards went to Ashish Lele of the National Chemical Laboratories, Pune (engineering and computer science); Satyajit Mayor of the National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bangalore (life sciences)Manjul Bhargava of Princeton University, U.S.A. (mathematics) and Ayyappanpillai Ajayaghosh of the National Institute for Interdisciplinary Science and Technology, Thiruvananthapuram (physical sciences).

According to the citation, Lele received the award for his “incisive contributions in molecular tailoring of stimuli responsive smart polymeric gels; exploring the anomalous behavior of rheologically complex fluids, and for building the bridge between macromolecular dynamics and polymer processing.”

Mayor was honoured for his work that “provides new insights into regulated cell surface organization and membrane dynamics, necessary for understanding self-organization and trafficking of membrane molecules in living cells, and in signaling between cells.”

Bhargava got the Infosys prize for his “extraordinarily original work in algebraic number theory. His work has revolutionized the way in which number fields and elliptic curves are counted.”

Ajayaghosh was recognised for his “pioneering development of methods for the construction of functional nanomaterials, which can be employed as components in energy conversion devices and in powerful substance selective optical sensors.”

The humanities prize went to Sanjay Subrahmanyam, Distinguished Professor of History and Navin & Pratima Doshi Endowed Chair in Pre-Modern Indian History, University of California at Los Angeles, U.S.A. (history) and well known writer Amit Chaudhuri, Professor of Contemporary Literature, University of East Anglia, Norwich, U.K. (literature).

The social sciences award has been conferred on Arunava Sen, Professor, Indian Statistical Institute, New Delhi.

Here’s hoping more private bodies take the cue.

Bear research conference

The conference will also address issues surrounding illegal sloth bear dancing and associated trade in India.{credit}Abrar Ahmed/Traffic India{/credit}

Taking the focus off its tiger-centric conservation efforts, India will host the 21st International Conference on Bear Research and Management in New Delhi next week. The conference is expected to see the launch of a national action plan for the conservation and welfare of the animal.

The science of bear conservation is expected to take centrestage as scientists and bear experts from around 37 countries  deliberate on topics ranging from genetic monitoring to ex-situ conservation of bears species from across the world.

Among the deliberations will be interesting stories such as the recent camera-trap records of 3 bear species in Northeast India, the ‘Hellenic Bear Register’ that has been steering conservation through a decade of genetic monitoring of brown bears in Greece, the radioactive contamination of Japanese black bears after the Fukushima nuclear disaster  and development of a gene chip for polar bears (Ursus maritimus) and how the technique can be used for other bears.

Experts will also present results from bear sign surveys, VHF and VHF-GPS monitoring of rehabilitated orphaned brown bear cubs, use of stable isotopes to detect bear diet patterns as also a non-invasive diet analysis for brown bears in the Italian Alps using DNA barcoding and next generation sequencing.

Conservation workers and scientists from Asia will find interest in an update of range map for Asiatic black bears and sun bears as also a session assessing genetic diversity, individual identification and genealogical relationships of Asiatic black bear (Ursus thibetanus) in Kashmir, India.
Ex-situ conservation of bear species in India will be on the agenda too. Experts from China will present results of mapping of the habitat suitability of Asiatic black bear using species distribution models. Besides, community participation in conservation & management of bears in captivity and their rescue and rehabilitation will also be discussed.
The conference begins on November 26 and will run for five days. India’s ministry of environment and forests will host it with wildlife conservation NGOs, the Wildlife Institute of India and the Central Zoo Authority.

Away from home: An eye for funds

Every Wednesday, our ‘Away from home’ blog series features one Indian postdoc working in a foreign lab recounting his/her experience of working there, the triumphs and challenges, the culture factor, tips for Indian postdocs headed abroad and what he/she misses most about India.

This week we have Moumita Chaki, a PhD from Indian Institute of Chemical Biology (IICB-CSIR), Kolkata, currently working as a Postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan Medical School, USA. She talks, among other things, about the problems of funding for independent postdoctoral research that visa-holders like her might face in the US.

Moumita Chaki (inset and standing top left with her UMMS group) says postdocs must look out for robust funding while choosing a lab.

Science for me

I was always interested to work on the molecular aspects of human diseases, even when I was pursuing my master’s degree in Botany. My PhD from IICB-CSIR, Kolkata was on molecular studies of Oculocutaneous albinism, reported as one of the 4 major causes of childhood blindness in India in 2002.

After that, when I was looking for a postdoc position in USA, I wanted to continue working on congenital eye-related disorders. Fortunately, I came across some literature on ‘retinal-renal ciliopathy’ and found it extremely fascinating. I was very keen to work on ciliopathy and applied to my present supervisor, one of the pioneers in the ciliopathy-field. I gladly accepted this position, when offered.

Present pursuits

I work on nephronophthisis (NPHP), an autosomal recessive cystic kidney disease, and the most frequent genetic cause for end-stage renal failure in the first three decades of life. Interestingly, NPHP can occur with isolated kidney involvement or in a combination with diverse extra-renal manifestations. My present research involves the identification and characterization of novel genes implicated in Nephronophthisis-related ciliopathies.

Life at University of Michigan Medical School

The best thing about my lab is the funding and the easy availability of resources. This is considered as a highly favourable situation anywhere in USA, as here funding is the key. Being in a premier university, we get introduced to new products are services readily after they launch and our central core facility is also very diverse and rich.

However, if one is looking for independent funding as a postdoctoral trainee, being an international candidate limits the availability of the funding sources. In our university, being a visa-holder, we can’t apply for Institutional funding since that is limited to the US citizens and permanent residents.

Look at funds before choosing a lab

For Indian students looking at a US lab for postdoctoral training, I’d say:

1. Before choosing a lab, consider their publication record for the last few years and choose a well-funded lab. You must have some sort of funding security in USA.

2. Lab environment is very vital. The decision making becomes easier if you are called for an interview in the lab itself.

3. Social life is as important as the professional life, especially when you are alone and not with family. So, it is important to balance work and life. If you are unhappy you cannot perform well.

For me it was a smooth transition in terms of adjusting to my new environs.

Miss mom-made food

I do miss my family and homemade food cooked by my mother. I’d certainly want to come back to India to work in the future, depending on what kind of opportunity opens up.

Away from home: Modeling biology

Every Wednesday, our ‘Away from home’ blog series features one Indian postdoc working in a foreign lab recounting his/her experience of working there, the triumphs and challenges, the culture factor, tips for Indian postdocs headed abroad and what he/she misses most about India.

This week we feature synthetic and systems biologist Kayzad Nilgiriwala working as a postdoc at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, USA. Kayzad completed his Ph.D. (Microbiology) at Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), Mumbai, India and wants to import some strong points from the US research scene when he comes back home.

Kayzad Nilgiriwala (fourth from right, in white shirt) with his MIT group.

Current passion

As a postdoctoral associate at MIT, I study the retroactive behaviour in transcriptional modules in a bacterial cell.

Science excites me

The inquisitiveness for science was there in me since school days. The basic structural and functional behaviour of things in nature (from atoms to cells to universe) gets me excited and this makes me want to explore them more by doing science.

Life at MIT

I am working in the field of synthetic and systems biology and I chose to work in the MIT lab to get more exposure and knowledge in these emerging fields. I have been learning how to make mathematical models and how the simulations from these models help our intuitions get a better picture towards predicting the structure and behaviour of a biological circuit system.

I really appreciate the pace of work and the availability of resources in the lab. Also, I like the general discipline that the people follow here.

Easy to fit in?

It was a bit difficult for me initially to acclimatize, but the transition was smooth. Some things, however, took time to get used to. For example, people in USA do not usually call their seniors sir/madam and I was not used to call my seniors by name .

And I have encountered another bitter truth: everyone here is highly professional and so no one is a ‘true’ good friend.

USA opens your mind

I would suggest students to experience a part of their lives in USA since it makes them think in a different way and it opens the mind to a new world. But, I would also strongly suggest them to return to India and imbibe the discipline and pace that they obtain in USA.

My main aim of doing a postdoc here in USA is to get more expertise and to know the reasons for success of research in this country. I would like to implement some of the positive aspects of research that I have observed here in India too. Hope for the best.

Miss my notebooks!

Needless to say I miss my family. Besides them, I miss my desk at my home and my school/college notebooks. It is certain that I will return to India to work in future.

Away from home: Proteins in Germany

Beginning this week, we will take a peek into the lives of Indian postdocs working in foreign labs. Our blog series ‘Away from home’ will feature one postdoc every Wednesday recounting his/her experience of working in a foreign lab, the triumphs and challenges, the culture factor, tips for Indian postdocs headed abroad and what he/she misses most about India.

Kangkan Halder says punctuality is the most inspiring German trait.

Teeing off the series for us is Kangkan Halder, who completed his doctoral thesis at the Institute of Genomics & Integrative Biology (IGIB), New Delhi and is currently a post-doctoral fellow at the Applied Synthetic Biology Group at the University of Göttingen, Germany.

Science and I

I am not sure what really got me interested in science, but I guess I was plain curious about things. I also liked the idea that in science there is a specific answer/reason for a specific question/observation.  On the other hand, for any generalization there is always an exception too! And I was really curious to know these exceptions.

Why this group at the University of Göttingen, Germany?

I chose the current lab because the project was completely different from what I did earlier. So I found it very interesting and a learning experience for my career. And since the ideas related to the project are relatively new, it was very exciting.  My work here is to develop a method to study structural changes and dynamics in proteins.

The best thing about my lab

All my lab mates! They are very nice and helpful, which makes every day at work very relaxing and pleasant.

The best thing about Germany

Time is a priority and everyone tries to do his/her best at the work place.

Culturally speaking

The German culture, weather and food are quite different from that in India. I am still quite overwhelmed by their punctuality in every sphere of life. The most fascinating thing about the German society is that they extend common courtesy and respect to complete strangers too, which is the reason I never felt as a foreigner or outsider.

A memorable incident I can recall from my initial days here is when I shared a student accommodation with a common kitchen for six residents. I would always caution everyone before seasoning my cooking with the Indian ‘tadka’ and to my delight, within a few minutes the entire kitchen would be mine, thanks to the delectable sneeze-inducing spices!

Looking for a postdoc position in Germany? My advice

Almost all universities have a welcome centre, get in touch with them. They are very, very helpful – they would help in setting your bank account, insurance, visa-office, accommodation, etc. Germany could be a little difficult while travelling for strict vegetarians. Learn basic cooking.

Indian winter clothes or shoes are not very helpful – plan buying here. Cycling is very common and safe – get one quickly. Language courses are not must for postdocs, but it would be very convenient at times – so if you have an opportunity, learn the basics.

I miss India

I would love it if there were a few more Indian grocery and fresh vegetable stores in and around where I live! I wish I could go home more often during festivities when family and friends miss me the most. It would also mean rejuvenating my taste buds with authentic Indian cooking and sweets.

Want to come back to India?

Absolutely! I am currently in search of a position in India, but it’s very difficult from here.

Patent fiasco

This week seems to be the ‘patent fiasco’ week for India.

To grant or not{credit}Getty{/credit}

First up was a media report alleging that a top GM food crop scientist made false claims about his patents just to get a national award. The scientist in question — Kailash Bansal – claimed to have filed three patents for new gene discoveries in crops. On the basis of the claims, he was selected for a national award for outstanding research in transgenic crops for the year 2007-2008.  However, it turns out that he had not applied for any patent even till July 2009, when he got the award.

The report goes on to provide proof of this goof up by citing data obtained from a ‘Right to Information’ (RTI) query as well as through sources from the patent application committee of the scientist’s institute, which had no clue of the applications till the award citation mention them. When the committee quizzed Bansal on this, he provided a patent application number filed in August 2009.

The scientist, subsequently designated director of India’s plant gene bank despite these false claims, continues to hold the award.

The question that the case raises is whether such misconduct by senior scientists will continue to be pushed under the carpet or will the Indian Council of Agricultural Research – the coveted research body that employs the scientist in question – respond to the allegations and hold him accountable.

In another significant development, India revoked a patent on a herbal medicine to treat diabetes. The government withdrew a patent given to drug maker Avesthagen on its diabetes drug made out of extracts from locally available plant parts. The reason: the extracts are known to be integral parts of the Ayurvedic, Unani and Siddha systems of medicine.

The move is being seen as the first step towards scrapping of many similar patents on medicines made out of commonly used plants and fruits such as amla, methi, karela and ashwagandha on grounds that they are part of traditional knowledge, something that India has begun to protect fiercely.

Coincidentally, Wired magazine started a series this week, analysing what is wrong with the patent systems and trying to find solutions to fix them. It would be great to follow the discussions over the coming weeks to see what lessons India can take home.