Rebecca Yahr Explained

Rebecca Yahr
Fields:Lichenology
Workplaces:Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh
Alma Mater:Duke University
Author Abbrev Bot:Yahr

Rebecca Yahr is an American lichenologist who works at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh in Scotland. She was President of the British Lichen Society from 2019 until 2021.[1]

Early life and education

Rebecca Yahr was born in the United States and grew up near the Appalachian Mountains. She studied botany at University of California, Davis for her B. Sc. degree, awarded in 1994.[2] She gained her doctorate from Duke University in 2004 for research into how the relationship between the fungi and algae within a lichen evolve over time.

Career

From 1991 until 1998 Yahr worked as a botanical research scientist, firstly for the California Native Plant Society and then at Archbold Biological Station in Florida, USA, where she began to be interested in lichens.[3] In 2005 she took up a research fellowship at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, UK and from 2006 has worked at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh in Scotland.[4] Her research concerns the evolution of lichens. She uses historical data and specimens, biogeography and molecular biology. She also studies the processes that underlie the lichen symbiosis.

She has served on the editorial boards of The Lichenologist and the Edinburgh Journal of Botany since 2010.[5]

From 2019 until 2022 she was President of the British Lichen Society, having served as Vice President from 2018 until 2019.

Since 2020 she has been the co-chair of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Lichen Specialist Group.[6] She contributes samples to the Darwin Tree of Life Project.

Yahr collaborated in the characterisation of Opegrapha viridipruinosa Coppins & Yahr (renamed Alyxoria viridipruinosa (Coppins & Yahr) Ertz)[7] and Phaeographis illitoraticola Lendemer, R.C. Harris & Yahr (now Phaeographis atromaculata (A.W.Archer) A.W.Archer).[8]

Publications

She is the author or co-author of over 45 scientific publications and several book chapters. These include:

Awards

In 1994 she was awarded a Young Botanist Award from the Botanical Society of America.[9]

The lichen species Gyalectidium yahriae was named after her in 2000.[10]

In October 2023 the Systematics Association invited Yahr to give the society's annual Founders Lecture.[11]

Personal life

Yahr is married to ecologist Chris Ellis and they have two children together.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dr Rebecca Yahr, Lichenologist . Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.
  2. News: Rushton . Susie . 2022 . Rebecca Yahr Lichenology 101 . November 19, 2022 . The Gentlewoman . 25.
  3. Web site: Rushby . Kevin . February 5, 2022 . What to see on a winter walk: an experts' guide to spotting birds, fungi and fossils . November 27, 2022 . the Guardian . en.
  4. Web site: Edinburgh . Royal Botanic Garden . Lichen conservation leads public on a trail of discovery . www.rbge.org.uk.
  5. Web site: The Lichenologist - Editorial board . 2024-06-28 . Cambridge University Press . en.
  6. Web site: IUCN SSC Lichen Specialist Group . November 19, 2022 . ICUN.
  7. Diederich . Paul . others . and . 2012 . New or interesting lichens and lichenicolous fungi from Belgium, Luxembourg and northern France. XIV . Bull. Soc. Nat. Luxemb . 113 . 95–115.
  8. Lendemer . J C . Yahr . R . 2004 . Phaeographis illitoraticola Lendemer, R.C.Harris & Yahr . Evansia . 21 . 3 . 128.
  9. Web site: BSA Young Botanist Awards . 28 June 2024 . Botanical Society of America.
  10. Buck . William R. . Sérusiaux . Emmanuël . 2000 . Gyalectidium yahriae, sp. nov. (Lichenized Ascomycetes, Gomphillaceae) from Florida and Papua New Guinea . The Bryologist . 103 . 1 . 134–138 . 10.1639/0007-2745(2000)103[0134:GYSNLA]2.0.CO;2 . 85995500 . 2268/175233.
  11. Web site: Systematics Association Founders' Lecture 2023 . 2023-10-13 . The Systematics Association . en-US.