News Flash
BEIJING, Jan 4, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - A Chinese scientist has named 16 new
spider species after songs by popular "Mandopop" musician Jay Chou.
Mi Xiaoqi, a professor at Tongren University in China's southwestern Guizhou
province, listed the newly discovered arachnids in a paper published in the
academic journal Zoological Research: Diversity and Conservation.
The paper, published in December, has gone viral since being discovered by
netizens this year, with a related hashtag on microblogging platform Weibo
racking up over 26 million views since Wednesday.
Weibo users have since dubbed Mi, 44, the "Ultimate Fan".
One of the arachnids -- the 3.5-millimetre long Cyclosa xingqing sp. nov. or
"Starry Mood spider" -- is named after a hit love song from Chou's debut
album "Jay" released in 2000.
Others are named after similarly beloved tunes, including "Rainbow spider",
"Dragon Fist spider", and "Excuse spider".
Taiwan-born Chou, renowned for his dramatic romance ballads and pop beats, is
one of the world's most popular Mandarin-language artists having sold over 30
million records.
The 45-year-old has been a household name on the Chinese mainland and beyond
for over two decades.
Now his songs will be immortalised as the names of the eight-legged critters
that Mi and his colleagues recently discovered in China's Yunnan province.
The Secret Code spider, a 2.36 millimetre yellowish brown web-weaving
arachnid, is named after Chou's 2002 love song featured on his acclaimed
album "The Eight Dimensions".
It's unclear how the song, in which Chou croons "Don't ever leave, you are
missing the missing piece in my world," relates to the spider.
Excuse spider, a fuzzy brown and white critter, shares its name with a track
from Chou's 2004 album "Common Jasmine Orange", the best-selling physical
album in China this century according to Guinness World Records.
Mi, who published the paper with fellow researchers Wang Cheng and Li
Shuqiang, has been a Jay Chou fan since his undergraduate days, according to
state media outlet Xinhua.
"Naming spiders after Jay Chou's songs brings scientific research closer to
the public. I hope more people will pay attention to scientific research and
support ecological protection," he told Xinhua.
This is not the first time Chou's name has been used for scientific
discoveries. In 2011, astronomers in Taiwan named an asteroid after the
singer.