Yolande Heslop-Harrison | |
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Born | Yolande Massey 18 July 1919 Newcastle upon Tyne, UK |
Died | 23 July 2015 (aged 96) |
Scientific career | |
Doctoral advisor | Kathleen Bever Blackburn |
Yolande Heslop-Harrison is a British botanist known for her work on carnivorous plants, ecology, and plant reproduction including stigma morphology. She shared the 1982 Darwin Medal with her husband Jack Heslop-Harrison.
She attended Central Newcastle High School for Girls. [1] She did her undergraduate studies University of Durham and graduated with high honors in 1941. She earned her Ph.D. at King's College, Durham University (now Newcastle University). [2] From 1971 until 1976 she was an honorary research fellow at Kew Gardens. [2] and later a Leverhulme Trust Research Fellow at the Welsh Plant Breeding Station.
Heslop-Harrison is known for her work on plant physiology, especially insect-eating plants. She used electron microscopy to examine the structural forms of carnivorous plants and tracked radioactive material to track the movements of proteins through leaf structures. [3] In 1996 Kew Gardens held a symposium to honor the work of both Jack and Yolande Heslop-Harrison and the proceedings were published in 1998. [4] [5]
In 1982 she shared the Darwin Medal with her husband, Jack Heslop-Harrison, for their work on "plant physiology including fundamental studies on insectivorous plants". [7] [8]
She met her future husband while they were undergraduate students, and they were married in 1950. [2]