Yoshiteru Murakami (1925-1997)
Yoshiteru Murakami died peacefully at Jyuzen general hospital
in Niihama City of Ehime Prefecture, at midnight on 4 February,
1997, after a long illness with cancer.
Murakami was born in Kure City, Hiroshima Prefecture on 7 March
1925. Ever since he graduated from Ehime Shihan-Gakko, now the
Faculty of Education, Ehime University in 1944, he did a great
contribution to the education in Ehime Prefecture for 40 years
till his retirement in 1984. First he became a teacher at Shimonada
Daiichi Kokumin-Gakko (Shimonada Dai-ichi elementary school) and
successively he became the headmaster of three elementary schools
(1973-1984) and the vice-principal of junior high school (1945-1969),
the supervisor of science of committee on education of Ehime prefecture
(1969-1973), the administrative supervisor of Saijo education
office, branch of education committee of Ehime prefecture (1978-1981),
and the vice-chief of school education section of education committee
of Niihama City (1981-1983).
Murakami was an excellent myriapodologist. In 1946, he started
the taxonomy of Myriapoda under Dr. Yasunori Miyosi. His way of
studing was a discreet, one always based upon ardent breeding
and careful examination of myriapods. First, he was deeply interested
in the post-embryonic development and ecology of Scutigeromorpha,
Lithobiomorpha, Polydesmida and Platydesmida.
Murakami maintained friendly relations with Dr. Shun-ichi Ueno,
Department of Zoology, the National Science Museum, Tokyo, who
is a good explorer and coleopterist who presented many cave-dwelling
myriapoda to him. Murakami was able to describe a great number
of cave-dwelling myriapoda.
Murakami has published more than 75 articles and has described
more than 60 new species of myriapoda both in Japan and in Korea.
Murakami was a member of Zoological Society of Japan, the Speleological
Society of Japan, the Japanese Society of Systematic Zoology,
the Japanese Society of Soil Zoology and other associations. In
1993, Murakami was appointed as a member of the wildlife conservation
committee of the Environment Agency of the Japanese Government.
He described on Diplopoda, Pauropoda, Chilopoda and Symphyla classes,
in the fifth chapter of A Checklist of the Japanese Species
of Wildlife (Invertebrates 1), edited by Environmental Agency
and published from Japan Wildlife Reserch Center. He also had
a deep interest in the cultivation and appreciation of oriental
orchids, which are simple but elegant, especially in Cymbidium
virescens Lindl.
Murakami is survived by his wife, Fumiko, and one son, Kazuo and
one daughter, Motoko.
Acknowledgments: I thank Dr. Shun-ichi Ueno (National Science
Museum, Tokyo), Dr. Kazuo Ishikawa (Shinonome University, Ehime),
Dr. Nobuo Tsurusaki (Tottori University, Tottori) and Mr. Tadao
Hamada (Education Committee of Niihama City, Ehime) for giving
notes on Murakami's personal history, and his life.
Kiyoshi ISHII, March 1997
Written by Jean-Jacques Geoffroy and
the CIM-Secretariat. Copyright© 1999-2001, Centre International
de Myriapodologie
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