Donald d'Emmerez de Charmoy

Donald d'Emmerez de Charmoy
Born (1906-06-28)June 28, 1906
Plaines Wilhems, British Mauritius
Died December 2, 1979(1979-12-02) (aged 73)
Sainte-Clotilde, Réunion
Nationality Mauritian Mauritius
Occupation Entomologist
President of CERF (1929–1974)
Organization CERF (Centre d'Essai de Recherche et de Formation)
Known for Genetic modification of sugarcane
Spouse(s) Marie-Antoinette Chauvet (married 1931)
Parent(s) Paul Donald d'Emmerez de Charmoy
Marie–Marguerite Louise Motet de Torvilliers
Relatives Jérôme J. Dufourg (great-grandson)

Donald d'Emmerez de Charmoy ISO (June 28, 1906 – December 2, 1979) was a Mauritian entomologist and biologist.

Biography

Donald d'Emmerez was born on June 28, 1906 in British Mauritius, and died on December 2, 1979. He is the son of an eminent Mauritian naturalist, Paul Donald d'Emmerez Charmoy and his wife, née Marie-Louise Marguerite Motet de Torvilliers. He is the second child of the couple, who had given birth in 1899 to a daughter, Valerie Marie Antoinette d'Emmerez de Charmoy.

He married Marie Antoinette Chauvet (1906–1937) on June 6, 1931.

He began his career by making a two-year internship in British India to study the hybridization of sugar. He was awarded the Imperial Service Order in the 1926 Birthday Honours, when he was the assistant director and entomologist at the Agricultural Department of Mauritius.[1] He led the Centre d'Essai de Recherche et de Formation (CERF)[2] from 1929 to 1974. Between these two dates, the average yields per hectare increased from two tonnes of sugar to more than five tons. It is now eight tons of sugar per hectare on average and can still improve.[3]

He is the great-grandfather of executive director of FKF Division One club FC Talanta, Jérôme J. Dufourg.

Career

He was the founder and first director of the Testing Station (renamed Test Center for Research and Training in 1973 (TCRT), or CERF in French) until his retirement in 1974. His international reputation allowed the CERF to exchange with other hybridization's stations of the world their best varieties.

He began at the age of 45 a breeding program of the cane in Reunion Island. Thanks to this researcher, "sugar agronomy of Reunion is raised to a high degree of perfection," according to Jean Defos du Rau, in his thesis in geography (1960).

In the 30s, Donald d'Emmerez de Charmoy hybridized a series of varieties that have saved the local industry from slump health, and largely explain the observed sugar boom during the fifteen years following the end of war conflict, and the naval blockade which was its consequence, net exports had stopped sugar, and many fields were abandoned or uprooted). All these varieties are from the same, which their progenitor us the secret in his personal archives: 19/32e sap noble, 4/32e Indian and 9/32e wild sap.[4]

Donald d'Emmerez de Charmoy experimented for the first time a fundamental principle of modern breeding, which is now well known breeders: interspecific hybridization.

At first, Emmerez imported of foreign varieties of hybrid nature newly obtained in order to restore the destroyed plantations, then began to work patiently on genetic improvement in Reunion Island in order to improve the hybrid cross method through the creation of material plant, because it was selected in the conditions of the island.

References

  1. The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 33179. p. 4417. 3 July 1926.
  2. "New names for buildings at eRcane's station in La Bretagne". Ercane.re. Retrieved 2013-08-18.
  3. "Exporter le savoir-faire réunionnais". Temoignages. 24 July 2004. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
  4. "Canne à sucre à la pointe...". Temoignages. 9 August 2006. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
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