Education
He joined as an Imperial Mycologist in 1910 and studied plant pathology at Pusa and at Coimbatore.
He joined as an Imperial Mycologist in 1910 and studied plant pathology at Pusa and at Coimbatore.
He was made a director of the Imperial Institute of Agricultural Research in 1934, a point when the institute was shifted from Bihar to Delhi after an earthquake. He described several species of fungi and worked on plant anatomy as well as research techniques including statistics. Among his works was a "A Handbook of Statistics Foreign Use in Plant Breeding And Agricultural Problems" (1936).