Ye Changyuan (born 1936) is an amphibian expert in the People's Republic of China and a researcher at the Amphibian and Reptile Laboratory of the Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Kurixalus, Genus of amphibians

Biography edit

 
Northern Red-legged Frog

In 1956, Ye Changyuan was admitted to the Animal Husbandry Major of Sichuan Agricultural College (now Sichuan Agricultural University). After graduation in 1961, she entered the Institute of Agricultural Biology, Sichuan Branch of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (now the Chengdu Institute of Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences) and began amphibian research.[1] Her husband Fei Liang is a research partner and a fellow amphibian expert. They met at the university and married in 1963.[2]

She initially served as assistant to amphibian research experts Liu Chengzhao and Hu Shuqin.[2]

Ye Changyuan suspended her scientific field research work in 1964 after becoming pregnant. To continue her work, Ye Changyuan and her husband cooperated to meet their own individual work needs.[2] One of them would primarily go into the field to collect specimens, and the other would stay at home to compile the resulting field data.[1]

According to Xinhua News Agency, the pair continued their field research despite conditions.

"Due to the nature of their work, the couple, who want to fill gaps in amphibian research for the country, have become a 'routine' for them to work in the field. Going from spring to winter and returning home, walking for more than half a year has been their normal work for decades; peas are the staple food, peppers are vegetables, living in tents and sleeping in granaries are a true portrayal of their field work; traveling through deserts, walking on plateaus, and exploring mountains and forests, They searched all over the country."[2]

Since 1980, the wife and husband herpetology team discovered 126 new species and records of amphibians. They established a new family and five new subfamilies, and a fifth tadpole type was defined.

Although both researchers retired in the 1990's, they jointly published a 1,040-page tome titled "Amphibians of China" (Volume 1) in 2016.[2] Ye's husband, Fei Liang, died at 86 in Chengdu, China, on 4 June 2022.[3]

Taxon named in her honor edit

To commemorate Ye Changyuan's contribution to the classification of amphibians, the scientific name of the new genus Yerana established in 2006 was taken from her surname "Ye."

Some Taxa described by Ye edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "八旬科学家夫妇的"神仙爱情":每天挽手上班_青网教育频道_中国青年网". edu.youth.cn. Retrieved 2024-04-15.
  2. ^ a b c d e ""80后"夫妻的"探蛙"人生-新华网". web.archive.org. 2021-04-17. Retrieved 2024-04-15.
  3. ^ "两栖动物学家、中国科学院成都生物研究所研究员费梁逝世_绘图_基础科学_物种". www.sohu.com. Retrieved 2024-04-15.
  4. ^ "Quasipaa yei (Chen, Qu, and Jiang, 2002) | Amphibian Species of the World". amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org. Retrieved 2024-04-15.