Rafael Antonio Curra (Ciudad Bolívar, Venezuela, February 14, 1934; Caribbean Sea, off the coast of Venezuela, December 12, 1968) was a Venezuelan ichthyologist and university professor. He is considered one of the pioneers of oceanographic studies in his native country.
He was an accomplished academic, administrator and scientist.
Biography
Rafael Antonio Curra was born in Ciudad Bolívar, in the Venezuelan Guiana region, on February 14, 1934. A natural son and only child of a humble seamstress named Justina Antonia Curra, his mother took him to Caracas at an early age in search for a better life.
He studied at the Miguel Antonio Caro Teacher School, in the Caracas parish of Sucre, where he obtained a teacher's degree in 1952, which allowed him to obtain a job as Principal at the Cañada de la Iglesia Evening School in Caño Amarillo. He completed his college degree at the Pedagogical Institute of Caracas where he graduated with honors in Biology and Chemistry in 1957.
In addition to being widely recognized for the many achievements at such an early age, Rafael Antonio Curra stood out for his virtuosity with the Venezuelan cuatro.
His wife died at the Military Hospital of Caracas in 1966, as a result of acute renal failure.
Advanced studies
After the Venezuelan Association for the Advancement of Science (AsoVAC) was founded in 1950 under the direction of the distinguished physician and academic Francisco De Venanzi, the concern for creating an oceanographic research center in Venezuela arose. An ambitious human resource training program allowed him to obtain a scholarship and attend first the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1958, and then the University of California at Los Angeles where he received the master's degree in Marine biology in 1960.
The Oceanographic Institute of Venezuela was created as a Branch of Universidad de Oriente by Presidential Executive Order 459 signed by interim President Edgar Sanabria on November 21, 1958.[3][4] The institute began its work in the facilities of the Marine Biology Laboratory of the Ministry of Agriculture in Caigüire, Sucre state, and moved to its definitive headquarters at the Universidad de Oriente main campus in the city of Cumana, in 1963. Rafael Antonio Curra was part of the initial staff of researchers of the institute.
In mid-1963 he was appointed Head of the Department of Marine Biology of the Oceanographic Institute of Venezuela where he developed a creative work organizing seminars, expeditions, courses and workshops, and stimulating his colleagues, publications and attendance at national and international conferences. He was the editor of the Lagena scientific publication at the Oceanographic Institute since its creation in 1963.[5][failed verification]
In 1967 he was appointed Director of the Oceanographic Institute of Venezuela where he promoted relations with the main universities in the world, which allowed the arrival of foreign researchers to reinforce the faculty with a view to imparting postgraduate studies in marine sciences.[6]
The Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission, IOC/UNESCO, is an organization founded by UNESCO founded in 1961 whose main function is to promote and coordinate the study of oceanography throughout the world. In 1968, cooperative investigations of the Caribbean Sea and adjacent regions were initiated with the participation of 18 countries with interest in the area, carrying out physical, chemical, geological and biological oceanography and fisheries work.[7]
The cause of the crash was believed to be pilot error, as a result of an optical illusion created by the lights of the city on an upslope. This caused the plane to crash into the sea and explode on impact, killing all on board.[citation needed]
On December 12, 2018, family and friends of the victims of the Pan Am Flight 217 gathered at 301 West 57th Street in Midtown Manhattan to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the tragedy, and deposited 51 flowers onto the waters of the Hudson River in memory of the victims. A commemorative plaque with the names of all passengers and crew members was handed over to the administration of the John F. Kennedy International Airport, the former Pan Am base from where the ill-fated flight originated.[11]
Tributes and distinctions
Upon confirmation of the death of Rafael Antonio Curra, the Board of Trustees of Universidad de Oriente declared three days of mourning, and ordered to raise the university flag at half-mast in all its university campuses.
The prominent Hindu philologist E. Kandaswamy Ganesan described and dedicated a kind of native benthicseaweed from the Venezuelan coast as Amphiroa currae Ganesan (1971) in posthumous tribute.[12]
His life and work is described in the book "Lost lives of the Clipper Malay" by genealogist Lizzie Lee, published in 2020[13]
Publications
Curra, R. A. (1961). "Notas sistemáticas sobre Urumara rondoni Miranda Ribeiro 1920 (Pisces: Gymnotoidei – Rhamphichthyidae)". Bol. Inst. Oceanogr. Universidad de Oriente, Cumaná, Venezuela: 1(2), pp. 474–482.
Curra, R. A. (1963). Ionic regulation in Austropotamobius Pallipes (Lereboullet): studies on the morphology, histochemistry and electrical properties of the isolated gills (Thesis). hdl:1842/13526.
Curra, R. A. (1964). "A brief note on the genus Rhamphichthys Mueller and Troschel 1846 (Gymnotoidei: Rhamphichthyidae)". Bol. Inst. Oceanogr., Universidad de Oriente, Cumaná, Venezuela: 3 (1/2), pp. 136–138.
Curra, R. A. (1964). "Notes on the genera Apteronotus (Lacépéde, 1800), and Sternopygus (Mueller and Troschel, 1846) with a discussion on the zoological categories Apteronotoidea (nom. transI.), Apteronotidae Berg 1940, and Apteronotinae Berg 1940 nom. transl.)". Bol. Inst. Oceanogr., Universidad de Oriente, Cumaná, Venezuela: 3.
Croghan, P. C.; Curra, R. A.; Lockwood, A. P. M. (1 June 1965). "The Electrical Potential Difference Across the Epithelium of Isolated Gills of the Crayfish Austropotamobius Pallipes (Lereboullet)". Journal of Experimental Biology. 42 (3): 463–474. doi:10.1242/jeb.42.3.463. PMID5856538.
Curra, R. A. (1965). "Notes on the morphology of the branchiae of the crayfish Austropotamobius pallipes (Lereboullet)". Zool. Anz.:174, pp. 313–323.
Curra, Rafael Antonio (1965). "An Instrument for the Measurement of Angles in Ichthyology". Copeia. 1965 (2): 230–232. doi:10.2307/1440729. JSTOR1440729.
Curra, R. A., Fukuoka, J., & Okuda, T. (1967). "La oceanografía física y química en Venezuela". LAGENA. Universidad de Oriente, Cumaná, Venezuela: 15/16, pp. 51–74.
Curra, R. A. (1967). "A Key to Genera, Species and Subspecies of Astacinae (Nephropsidea: Astacidae)". Internationale Revue der gesamten Hydrobiologie und Hydrographie. 52 (5): 793–800. doi:10.1002/iroh.19670520508.
Curra, R. A. (1968). "Contribución sobre los recursos pesqueros de las Lagunas de Unare y Píritu". LAGENA. Universidad de Oriente, Cumaná, Venezuela: pp. 17–18.
References
^Mudarra, M. A. (1988). Semblanzas de educadores venezolanos. IPASME. pp. 308, 315. ISBN980-6122-07-0.
^Curra, R. A., Biological Sciences thesis and dissertation collection (1963). Ionic regulation in Austropotamobius pallipes (Lereboullet): Studies on the morphology, histochemistry and electrical properties of the isolated gills. The University of Edinburgh. hdl:1842/13526.
^Ganesan, E. K. (6 March 2019). "Amphiroa currae (Corallinaceae), a new species of marine algae from Venezuela". Phycologia. 10 (2–3): 155–161. doi:10.2216/i0031-8884-10-2-155.1.
^Lee, Lizzie (2020). Lost lives of the Clipper Malay. Independently Published. ISBN979-8-6845-1700-6.
Bibliography
Gonzalez, Domingo (2005). "Semblanza de Rafael Antonio Curra". Boletín del Instituto Oceanográfico de Venezuela. 44 (2). Universidad de Oriente, Instituto Oceanográfico de Venezuela, Cumaná, Sucre. Venezuela: 145–146.
Cervigón, Fernando (2009). "Mi visión del Instituto Oceanográfico de Venezuela". Boletín del Instituto Oceanográfico de Venezuela. 48 (2). Universidad de Oriente, Instituto Oceanográfico de Venezuela, Cumaná, Sucre. Venezuela: 85–88.