Sir Edwin John ButlerFRS was an Irish mycologist and plant pathologist. He became the Imperial Mycologist in India and later the first director of the Imperial Bureau of Mycology in England. He was knighted in 1939.. During his twenty years in India, he began large scale surveys on fungi and plant pathology and published the landmark book Fungi and Disease in Plants: An Introduction to the Diseases of Field and Plantation Crops, especially those of India and the East and has been called the Father of Mycology and Plant Pathology in India.
In 1920, Butler returned to the United Kingdom to take up the post of director at the new Imperial Bureau of Mycology at Kew, Surrey, which was intended to research and provide information on plant diseases throughout the British empire. He helped staff and establish the bureau, later known as the International Mycological Institute, until his resignation in 1935. Among his later studies were Panama disease of bananas, witch's broom disease of cacao in Trinidad, and Yellow Leaf disease of tea in Nyasaland. In 1930 he published the Fungi of India along with Guy Richard Bisby. Butler subsequently became the first paid secretary of the Agricultural Research Council until ill-health forced his retirement in 1941. Butler was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1926, president of the British Mycological Society in 1927 and president of the Association of Applied Biologists from 1928 to 1929. He was appointed to the Order of St Michael and St George in 1932 and was knighted in 1939. He died in 1944 following an attack of influenza. Several species of fungal pathogens were named by him and many have been named in his honour.
Commemoration in Ireland
The work of Sir Edwin John Butler is commemorated in the naming of a building at University College Cork in his honour. The Butler Building houses plant science teaching and research facilities, part of the School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences at the university. The school also awards a 'Butler Prize' to plant science undergraduate students. The Society of Irish Plant Pathologists award a Butler Medal to individuals who have made a significant contribution to plant pathology in Ireland. A plaque in his honour was unveiled at Kilkee, Co. Clare in May 2012.
Selected publications
1903. Report on 'Spike' disease among sandalwood trees.
1906. Indian wheat rusts. Mem. Dep. Agric. India, Bot. Ser. 1, 58 pp. 1 graph, 5 pls..
1908. Report on coconut palm disease in Travancore. Bull. Agric. Res. Inst. Pusa, no. 9, 23 pp.
1909. Fomes lucidus Fr. a suspected parasite. Indian Forester, 35, 514–518, 1 col. pl.
1918. Fungi and disease in plants. Thacker, Spink & Co. Calcutta. vi+547 pp. 206 figs.
1924. Bud-rot of coconut and other palms. Rep. Imp. Bot. Conf. Lond. July 1924, 145–147.