Yolarnie Amepou | |
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Born | 1988 (age 35–36) Madang, Madang Province, Papua New Guinea |
Education | University of Papua New Guinea University of Canberra |
Occupation(s) | Herpetologist; conservationist |
Known for | Director of the Piku Biodiversity Network |
Yolarnie Amepou (born 1988) is a zoologist and conservationist from Papua New Guinea. She is known for her work to protect the Papuan softshell turtle (Carettochelys insculpta) in Kikori. In 2017 she was a Youth Champion for the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations. She was also received a Pride of Papua New Guinea Award for Environment in 2015.
Amepou was born in Madang in 1988 and attended Holy Spirit Primary School, then Tushab Secondary School.[2] She studied at the University of Papua New Guinea and graduated in 2011 with a Bachelor of Science with a focus on marine biology.[3] After graduation from her BSc, during her honours year of study, she volunteered for the “Piku” project, a Canberra University research and conservation program to protect the endangered Papuan softshell turtle - Carettochelys insculpta.[3] The project was funded by ExxonMobil, which then funded her Master's degree at the Institute for Applied Ecology at the University of Canberra.[3][4] In 2019 she was appointed Director of the Piku Biodiversity Network Inc., which emerged from the previous conservation programme.[5][6] Human harvesting of the turtles is the major threat they face in Papua New Guinea, and Amepou's work encourages communities to self-impose no-harvest zones and to monitor turtle numbers to try to build sustainable populations.[7][8]
In addition to her work on the project, she works and researches as a herpetologist. In 2015, alongside a team of Australian scientists, she described the new species Elseya rhodini and the subgenus Hanwarachelys within the genus Elseya as part of a revision of the species complex around the New Guinea snapping turtle Elseya novaeguineae. The research team worked on the entire species complex and, in addition to the newly described species, also raised Elseya schultzei, previously regarded as a synonym, to species status again.[9] In 2017 she was part of the team that established the Endangered status of the Papuan Softshell Turtle status for the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).[10] In June 2019, she co-authored an article appeared on the status of the chytrid fungus (Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis), which is pathogenic in numerous amphibians.[11]