Dr. Kunte, looks like  you have referred all books, except one "Illustrated  
Checklist of Butterflies of Nepal" by Colin Smith which has Great Darkie 
listed. Please check this out. 
 
And before I close this topic permanently from my side and I go out chasing 
butterflies which is what I enjoy, here are the  unbiased comments  from one of 
the leading experts on Indian Lepidoptera, Mr. Peter Smetachek who is author of 
Butterflies of Delhi, Kalpavriksh) and a known name in lepidoptera 
research. Isaac

" Dear Isaac,
Torben Larsen considers that Allotinus multistrigatus and A. drumila are 
conspecific. In that event, drumila is senior and should be used.
Concerning the common name, there are two available, Crenulate Darkie and Great 
Darkie. Since only some of the individuals, previously classified as drumila, 
have crenulate wing margins, it is sensible to use Great Darkie, a term which 
is appliable to those individuals previously known as A. multistrigatus as well 
as those known as drumila.
Concerning the use of the term Darkie, there is no law of precedence applicable 
to trivial names. If it were applicable, of course Darkie would have 
precedence. While the term "Darkie" might be politically incorrect for use with 
reference to people of African origin in America and Europe, the term Brownie 
could be construed to be equally offensive to people of Middle Eastern or South 
Asian origin, who are not familiar with the use of the term Brownie outside an 
American context or in fairy tales.
To my mind, therefore, you have correctly labelled the insect in the photograph 
as a Great Darkie. The term is for use in India, where American guilt over 
slavery is not a part of our national heritage.
Warm regards,
Peter " 


--- On Mon, 15/12/08, [email protected] <[email protected]> 
wrote:

From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ButterflyIndia] GREAT DARKIE - What's there in the name?? much!
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, 15 December, 2008, 11:06 PM







dear isaac and others,


please continue to call me by my name. although the "Dr." helps in professional 
matters (which is why it appears in my email signature), PhD is just another 
degree i have picked up along the way. i am happy to remain plain 'krushnamegh' 
on this group.


turning to the issue at hand, it is precisely because anyone can give english 
names to butterflies, you should *also* have mentioned the scientific name in 
your email. this is a practice that i have always followed and urged everyone 
to follow at least when they know what they are talking about, and know enough 
about scientific names. you are welcome to follow this practice if you wish; 
otherwise there are going to be more confusions like this one in the future, 
just as there have been in the past (recall the case of balakrishnan valappil's 
hemipteran for which you supplied the name "Hitler bugs", and my butterflyindia 
email of 16 Feb. 2007 in response).


but this goes beyond a mere confusion. regarding the english name of A. 
drumila, i have checked all of colin smith's books (by the way, the name is not 
with two 'l's, as you mention it in your email): Field Guide to Nepal's 
Butterflies (1981), Butterflies of Nepal (Central Himalaya) (1989), and 
Butterflies of Royal Chitwan National Park Nepal (1997). none of them list 
Allotinus drumila or the Great Darkie either in the text or in the index. if 
you can tell me which of his books or other publications gives A. drumila as 
the Great Darkie, i will look it up. even wynter-blyth' s Butterflies of the 
Indian Region (1957) gives drumila as the Crenulate Darkie. looking at more 
recent books, torben larsen's Butterflies of Bangladesh - an Annotated 
Checklist (2004), gives A. drumila as Crenulate Darkie, not as the Great 
Darkie. so all the authors, except you, refer to drumila by its english name as 
the Crenulate Darkie. my email did not concern the difference
 between Darkie and Brownie, although i did mention the reason for the change 
between the two. it concerned the correctness of 'Crenulate' (which is standard 
as i just mentioned) and 'Great' (which is not) for drumila. so your accusation 
of my imposing non-standard english names is simply incorrect and demands some 
reflection, and referencing, on your part.


about the issue of the replacement english name of A. drumila, Onelook.com 
(http://www. onelook.com/ ?w=brownie&ls=a) gives only three definitions of 
'brownie':


noun:  square or bar of very rich chocolate cake usually with nuts
noun:  (folklore) fairies that are somewhat mischievous
name:  A surname (very rare: popularity rank in the U.S.: #36189)


Onelook.com has links to miriam webster's, cambridge and many other highly 
respected english language dictionaries, in which you can confirm that 
'brownie' does not have the racist connotations that 'darkie' always has. the 
most common usage of 'brownie' is in reference to the dark brown cake 
(definition 1 above), presumably based on its color, which is appropriate to 
describe these butterflies. so, my replacement of Darkie by Brownie had an 
explanation in my last email, which, given the long and terrible history of 
slavery-related human abuse in the west, is a mighty good reason for the name 
change. in absence of previous usage of the name combinations by any of the 
authors you say you follow, what is your good reason for assigning the "Great 
Darkie" to A. drumila in your book and in your email when that name had 
previously been assigned in two important books to a junior synonym, A. 
multistrigatus? you have caused simply unnecessary trouble with this
 usage.


my english names will be published soon, with notes and explanations for every 
name that differs from that given in evans's Identification of Indian 
Butterflies (1932), which gave english names to all the indian butterflies then 
known (and as a rule i will change only those names that are racist, 
objectionable or wrong on other grounds, such as the Nigger for Orsotriaena 
medus, which i will call the 'Medus Brown' in my next book). i hope that the 
english names of indian butterflies will be standardized after that, just as 
english names of north american and british butterflies have been standardized 
in reference books that list all of their species and subspecies. however, i 
hope that we will continue to mention english and scientific names of 
butterflies in our posts on this group even after that because our group will 
always remain a mixture of amateurs and professionals. i have said this before 
and i repeat here: names don't contribute any additional
 information on species, but names mean much because they convey precisely what 
we are talking about and thus avoid confusion when communicating with others. 
this should be easy to accept.


best regards,


At 11:57 AM +0530 12/15/08, Isaac Kehimkar wrote:
Dr. Kunte,
Unfortunately there are no rules for giving Common Names to butterflies or any 
species like the Code for Zoological Nomenclature,  so any one can give a 
common name to  a species  as one wishes to suit their fancy.  Dr. Kunte, 
if you wish to change from "Darkie"  to  "Brownie" it does not serve the 
purpose as " Brownie" too has a racist connotations.
 
I follow Collin Smith for the butterfly  names and taxonomy  for the north-east 
and after consulting  a good lot of butterfly taxonomists, both national and 
international, it is clear that Allotinus drumila and Allotinus multistrigatus 
are conspecific and in this case I have followed Collin Smith ( author of 
Butterflies of Nepal), who calls it GREAT DARKIE.  I follow only those who have 
established reputation in field of butterfly taxonomy.
 
Please do not impose your " Common Names" unless published in a peer-reveiwed 
Journal or known publication.
Isaac Kehimkar
 


--- On Sun, 14/12/08, krushnamegh@ mail.utexas. edu <krushnamegh@ mail.utexas. 
edu> wrote:

From: krushnamegh@ mail.utexas. edu <krushnamegh@ mail.utexas. edu>
Subject: Re: [ButterflyIndia] PHOTOGRAPH OF 2008-GREAT DARKIE
To: ButterflyIndia@ yahoogroups. com
Date: Sunday, 14 December, 2008, 12:19 PM

isaac, that's a Crenulate Brownie (Allotinus drumila). this used to be called 
the Crenulate Darkie (as given in Evans and other books) but i have changed the 
name to "Brownie" to avoid the racist connotations of "Darkie". your reference 
to the "Great Darkie" is erroneous on two accounts; the foremost being that 
that name refers to Evan's Allotinus multistrigatus, which is a junior synonym 
of A. drumila; and that your butterfly is not multistrigatus even by Evans's 
standard. the misidentification not withstanding, it is true that this species 
(i.e., A. drumila) is listed under Schedule I of india's Wildlife (Protection) 
Act. i photographed this in mizoram last april, so we have two indian records 
of this rare species within a single year!


At 11:09 PM +0530 12/13/08, Isaac Kehimkar wrote:

Dear Friends,


 

Got this rare butterfly in Sikkim's Butterfly Park [under construction] at 
Rangrang. Protected under the Wildlife Protection Act [1972] on Scheule 1, this 
dainty butterfly enjoys the same status as the Tiger or Elephant..

 

Usha Lachungpa was there when we almost overlooked this butterfly perched 
motionless, despite  so many BNHS Members flocking to see this rare find.

Cheers!

Isaac



--

Dr. Krushnamegh Kunte

Post-doctoral Research Fellow (Kronforst Lab)
FAS Center for Systems Biology
Harvard University
52 Oxford St
Northwest Lab Room 458.40-3
Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.

Ph: (617) 496-0078
Cell: (512) 577-1370
Fax: (617) 495-2196
Email: [email protected]. edu or krushnamegh@ gmail.com

Academic Website: http://www.people. fas.harvard. edu/~kunte/ AcademicsHome. htm
General Website: http://www.people. fas.harvard. edu/~kunte/ index.htm






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-- 


Dr. Krushnamegh Kunte

Post-doctoral Research Fellow (Kronforst Lab)
FAS Center for Systems Biology
Harvard University
52 Oxford St
Northwest Lab Room 458.40-3
Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.

Ph: (617) 496-0078
Cell: (512) 577-1370
Fax: (617) 495-2196
Email: [email protected]. edu or krushnamegh@ gmail.com

Academic Website: http://www.people. fas.harvard. edu/~kunte/ AcademicsHome. htm
General Website: http://www.people. fas.harvard. edu/~kunte/ index.htm 














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