|

"Education brings awareness and is
the path to success."
Professor Leonard O'Garro
Professor Leonard O'Garro is a coordinator of
the United Nations Global Biosafety Programme. A former
professor of plant pathology at The University of the West
Indies (UWI), Cave Hill, Barbados, he did extensive research to
reduce the spread of diseases affecting Caribbean agricultural
crops. He trained many UWI graduates and led the effort to
establish UWI as a centre for plant pathology research in the
region.
Leonard Wellington
O'Garro was born on 31st May, 1958 in Kingstown, St. Vincent and
the Grenadines. As a student, he played sports, painted
and did well academically. He first studied history but
later decided to study science instead. In 1982, he
completed a Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Biology and Chemistry
at UWI, Cave Hill, Barbados. For his Doctor of Philosophy
(PhD), he did research on tomato "wilting disease," a fungal
disease that kills the plants or prevents them from bearing.
In 1988, Dr O'Garro
began lecturing in biology at UWI. During this time, he
secured several research grants from leading regional and
international institutions, which were used by his students.
In 1993, he discovered the agent that causes onion blast
disease, which severely affected the onion industry in Barbados
and St. Kitts and Nevis. His work promoted the development
of disease control methods as well as research into new
disease-resistant varieties of the crop. He also helped
address the "rainy season" disease that infects pepper and
tomato crops in the Eastern Caribbean, and developed disease
control programmes for anthuriums and yams in Dominica and
Barbados, and papaya in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
Dr O'Garro was promoted
to Professor of Plant Pathology in 1999. He conducted many
workshops on plant biotechnology and plant pathology and served
as the team leader of the UWI biotechnology programme.
Professor
O'Garro served on the National Committee on Biotechnology and
Biosafety in Barbados, the United Nations Compliance Committee
for the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, editorial boards of
several international science journals, and numerous boards of
government agencies overseeing agriculture and science and
technology. In 2005, he joined the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP) as one of its global coordinators
of a programme to oversee the implementation of the Cartagena
Protocol on Biosafety. He also assisted Caribbean
countries with this programme, through the development and
implementation of national biosafety frameworks. He is
currently charged with the responsibility of developing the UWI
Biotechnology Institute for the Caribbean.
Professor Leonard O'Garro advises students,
"If you have a keen interest in science, you should pursue it,
seizing initiatives and going beyond the call of duty to make a
worthwhile contribution." He believes that, "Children
should pursue training in the field that they love best."

|
|
Photos from top to bottom:
1. Tomato wilt prevents the uptake of water from
the soil resulting in the plants wilted appearance.
2. Onion blast is a fungus that spreads rapidly,
devastating the leaves, hence the name "blast".
3. The papaya is a short-lived, fast-growing,
woody plant which grows 10-12 feet in height.
|