Kota Farmer Develops Mango Variety that Bears Fruits Round the Year
- Dwarf Variety of Mango called Sadabahar
[Ministry of
Science & Technology Press Release/05.04.2021]
Shrikishan Suman (55 years), a farmer
from Kota, Rajasthan, has developed an innovative mango variety which is a regular
and round-the-year dwarf variety of mango called Sadabahar,
which is resistant to most major diseases and common mango disorders.
The fruit is sweeter in taste, comparable
to langra and being a dwarf variety, is suitable for kitchen
gardening, high-density plantation, and can be grown in pots for some years too.
Besides, the flesh of the fruits, which is bourn round the year, is deep orange
with sweet taste, and the pulp has very less fiber content which differentiates
it from other varieties. The bountiful of nutrients packed in mango are immensely
good for health.
Poverty led Shrikishan,
the brain behind this mango variety, to drop out of school after class two and take
up the family profession of gardening (Mali). He had an interest in floriculture
and orchard management while the family was focused on growing wheat and paddy.
He realised that the success of crops like wheat and paddy
was dependent on external factors like rainfall, animal attack, and so on, limiting
their profits.
He started growing flowers to augment
family’s income, the first ones being different varieties of roses, and sold them
in the market. Along with this, he started growing mango too.
In 2000, he identified a mango tree
in his orchard with an appreciable growth trend, dark green colored leaves. He noticed
that the tree bloomed round the year. On observing these traits, he prepared five
grafted mango plants using it as a scion. It took him about fifteen years to develop
this variety by preserving and preparing the grafts. He noticed the grafted plants
started bearing the fruits from the second year of grafting itself.
The innovative attributes of the
variety have been verified by the National Innovation Foundation (NIF),
India, an autonomous institution of the Department of Science & Technology,
Government of India. NIF also facilitated an on-site evaluation of the variety through
ICAR - Indian Institute of Horticultural Research (IIHR), Bangalore,
and a field testing at SKN Agriculture University, Jobner
(Jaipur), Rajasthan. It is in the process of being registered under the Protection
of Plant Variety and Farmers Right Act and ICAR-National Bureau of Plant Genetic
Resources (NBPGR), New Delhi. NIF has also facilitated the plantation
of Sadabahar mango variety in the Mughal Garden at Rashtrapati Bhawan in New Delhi.
For this evergreen variety developed,
Shrikishan Suman was conferred
the NIF’s 9th National Grassroots Innovation and Traditional
Knowledge Award and subsequently recognised at various
other fora. Through various channels, NIF has been making efforts towards dissemination
of the information about the variety amongst farmers’ networks, government organisations, state agriculture departments, NGOs, etc.
Shrikishan Suman received over 8000
orders of Sadabahar gratings from India and abroad
during 2017- 2020. He supplied over 6000 plants to different farmers spread across
the states of Andhra Pradesh, Goa, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal
Pradesh, Jharkhand, Kerala, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab,
Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand,
West Bengal, Delhi and Chandigarh during 2018-2020. Over 500 plants were transplanted
at Krishi Vigyan Kendras, and research institutes in the states of Rajasthan
and Madhya Pradesh by the innovator himself, and over 400 grafted plants were provided
at different research institutes in Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and
Gujarat.