I’ve been a birder for 50+ years.  I’m unproud to say my skills have not really 
advanced much in those years.  I have no audio capabilities (too many voices in 
my head I think…) I haven’t added to my life list in a while and 90% of my 
lists were completed in an ornithology course in college and jungle trips in 
South America.

 

My undergraduate degree was in Environmental Education, but I screwed up and 
went to law school…. So birding and most wildlife viewing got in the back seat 
of my life at times. I still point out hawks sitting on light poles to whoever 
is sitting in the car or sometimes to no one. Then I try and figure out what 
type of hawk it is. Growing up in Ohio that was a real issue, versus here, red 
tailed…..

 

The one thing that I have also stumbled over/laughed/ at been curious about is 
bird names are always changing. I get excited when I see a sparrow hawk and 
then spend 10 minutes trying to remember what the new name is. I looked at some 
of my early bird books and a third of the names are now different.  I seriously 
read these emails thinking “is that a new bird I don’t know about or have I 
missed another name change.”

 

Bird is the only wildlife accounting study where the names change. I’ve not 
seen a fungus name change announcement ever.

 

The American Bison, Wolf, Alligator etc. have not changed their names since my 
classes at The Ohio State University in the 70’s. I’ve always thought there 
were a group of egg head birders (figure that out) sitting around coming up 
with new names just to make birding more challenging for me (a personal issue 
in my mind).

 

So this latest round of changes have a reason in a lot of peoples minds, other 
than to just confuse me further. Sure at some point we will cease because we 
won’t know if Grunt & Doink, our Neanderthal cousins ate other Neanderthals so 
we can’t change the Purple Footed Doink to something else.

 

If it gets one more person into birding or liking birding or worrying about 
birding I’m all I favor of it.

 

If it protects one more bird, please continue to confuse me.

 

If Sibley has another book to sell, OK, hopefully he will come by on a book 
tour and I can sit in the back and wonder how he does it. Or I can write the 
new names in my old book because unlike humans, changing our name does not mean 
a trip to the salon (or saloon) to get a new hair color.

 

Obviously it is providing birders with something to talk about, as I sit here 
in my office trying to bird out the window, with computer glasses on that allow 
me to almost focus on the window.

 

Going to get my blow tube that I brought back from the jungle and sit on the 
deck birding and shooting outdoor cats. I love cats but they are indoor animals 
and the darts don’t have Curare on them…any more. I’m not good enough to hit 
the cats, and as long as I don’t cough and inhale a dart I can hit the fence 
and scare the cats away.

 

Just my $400 worth (I am an attorney so Yes I have an inflated value of myself)

 

Jim Moss

 

From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Eric 
DeFonso
Sent: Friday, November 3, 2023 12:59 PM
To: cobirds@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [cobirds] AOU, Changing bird names

 

Sunrise Phoebe - EXCELLENT!

 

I think a lot of inspiration can come from seeing the kinds of English names 
given to hummingbirds in the neotropics. These names are a delight and if 
nothing else add greatly to the fun involved in searching them out and of 
course in finding them. I have perceived the value of an appropriate, catchy, 
or distinctive name for a bird, and I'm sure I'm not the only one. It adds to 
their charisma, and I would submit that anything that helps people feel more 
connected to the birds and thus to the natural world, even if it operates on an 
unconscious level, has a value. Names are part of language, and language is 
fascinating.

 

Sure, I'd still chase a dull-colored cardinal if one shows up in Boulder 
County, but I love the fact that on that magical day when someone finds it, 
I'll be seeing messages with PYRRHULOXIA splattered all over the subject lines 
instead. :)

 

Eric

 

p.s. There really is a bird called the Dull-colored Grassquit in South America. 
It's an accurate name, for what it's worth.

 

-------

Eric DeFonso
Boulder County, CO

 

 

On Thu, Nov 2, 2023 at 11:04 PM Megan Miller <megan.k.miller2...@gmail.com 
<mailto:megan.k.miller2...@gmail.com> > wrote:

I am a freshly minted 31 year old and I have been part of Colorados birding 
community for around 20 years. I grew up here, found my passion for birds and 
wildlife here, and built a career out of it. It was very difficult and now that 
I am here the path forward doesn’t feel any easier. We still have great 
challenges to overcome to create a better planet for birds and people.

 

 A few years ago when discussion about changing bird names moved through 
twitter and instagram I was also initially hesitant. I love Wilson’s Warblers 
with all of my heart. But the more I learned about some (but not all) of the 
men that described these species the more it seemed that they were murderers 
first and avian hobbyists on the side. I think there are plenty of platforms to 
remember the people who described and categorized all these birds and it’s time 
to move on to new naming conventions. 

 

I know for a lot of younger birders this feels important because we feel we 
have so little power the change our world for the better. It feels like a tiny 
step to building a community fitting to our and future generations. I do think 
it’s inevitable and it is only a small change considering the changes that 
could face us in the coming years. 

 

I think Says Phoebe should be called Sunrise Phoebe. 

 

Megan Miller

Pueblo, Co 

 

 

On Thu, Nov 2, 2023 at 10:08 PM Eric DeFonso <bay.w...@gmail.com 
<mailto:bay.w...@gmail.com> > wrote:

I've just turned 56 and have now been birding for 30 years, but I am excited 
about the prospect of some significant name-changes. I too have had the 
opportunity to get to know a lot of young birders, and they get it, which 
delights me.

 

Personally, yes, I cringed once I realized who John McCown was. That to me was 
an embarrassment, and now that I know who he was and what he fought for, 
there's no unlearning that. I'm glad to see that the common name for the bird 
no longer reflects the legacy of that really awful man. I can only imagine then 
what a letdown it was or would have been if I weren't a white person but wanted 
to get into birding. As we've seen, it was easy enough to change that common 
name out, and we now regularly refer to that bird as the Thick-billed Longspur. 
To me it's like taking down a statue of Robert E Lee. Doing so doesn't erase 
Lee (or McCown) from history, it only means we no longer celebrate what they 
did or represented. Similarly, I still look back in amazement at how long the 
former name of the Long-tailed Duck was retained. It was still in effect when I 
started birding and I remember being a bit surprised at its existence and use 
since it sounded so degrading to living people, so when it got switched, I felt 
better about referring to the bird.

 

Moreover, I do look forward to the new names that we'll be finding for 
Townsend's Warbler, Solitaire, and Shearwater. It's a lot easier to advocate 
for the protection of birds (by us humans) when the very name of the birds 
you're seeking to protect aren't pointlessly offensive to other humans whose 
help and cooperation we need. It's all about respect. The next generation of 
birders needs to be larger and more diverse than we've been up until now, and 
the objective is to get lots more people to care about the long-term well-being 
of birds and their habitats. All hands on deck. I'm all for carrying out an 
easy reform that reflects a commitment to having as many people help out as can 
be. It's just a starting point to be sure, but why not.

 

I agree that sometimes eponymic names seem preferable because unique and 
concise adjectival descriptors for some species can be difficult to come up 
with. (One can witness this firsthand upon reading the South American 
Classification Committee forum exchanges, where committee members routinely 
discuss necessary name changes for South American birds.) This will be 
especially true for so many tropical species, although the current initiative 
isn't really designed or aimed at those groups. I also know that not all 
eponyms derive from people who were awful. Some were at worst just mildly 
annoying or no more fallible or obnoxious than any of us. Some names have 
little or no connection to the people who actually first described the birds 
(William Swainson comes to mind on both counts.) Humboldt was practically 
exemplary of a great human being even by our modern standards, certainly way 
above his contemporaries. Many others, like Parker, lived concurrently with 
some of us and do seem worthy of commemoration. To that I would say, sure, 
although I also remember that the name changes we're discussing are only for 
the common names, and not the scientific names. That's because changing the 
Latinized species name is an essentially impossible process according to the 
longstanding and universal ICZN (International Code of Zoological Nomenclature) 
conventions. For that reason, even now the Thick-billed Longspur's scientific 
name is Rhynchophanes mccownii, and cannot be changed unless a major change in 
our understanding of its systematics arises (which in its case seems very 
unlikely now).

 

Similarly, Townsend's name will persist in scientific names like that of the 
solitaire (Myadestes townsendi), etc. As will Parker's if it ever comes to that 
with the tropical Parker's Antbird (Cercomacroides parkeri).

 

 

-------

Eric DeFonso
Boulder County, CO

 

 

On Thu, Nov 2, 2023 at 7:58 PM nic korte <nkor...@hotmail.com 
<mailto:nkor...@hotmail.com> > wrote:

As an old guy lucky enough to go birding now and then with some 
20-somethings…they are very passionate about this.   They are the future.  

 

 (I agree with Kenn Kaufman, however, the loss of an honorific such as Parker’s 
Antbird, would seem wrong. Besides, some of those families are so similar that 
meaningful descriptive names are impossible.)

Nic Korte

Sent from my iPad

 

On Nov 2, 2023, at 7:47 PM, Susan Rosine <u5b2mt...@gmail.com 
<mailto:u5b2mt...@gmail.com> > wrote:

 

Let's face it -- a lot of bird names are stupid in general. They are not 
descriptive.  

So, don't just get rid of white men's names ------ 

Junco - Spanish for reed. ?????

Mallard -- old French/English for Drake ?????

Wren -- who knows? Haha

Loon -- they aren't crazy (haha)

Waterthrushes are Warblers. Fix that. 

 

***WOMEN - how do you feel about Ruby-crowned Kinglet? The female is not 
ruby-crowned! And what about:

Red-Winged Blackbird

Ring-necked Pheasant

Red Crossbill

Brown-headed Cowbird

Chestnut-collared Longspur

Purple Finch

Rose-breasted Grosbeak

American Redstart

Hooded Warbler

Black-throated Blue Warbler

And on, and on, and on. 

 

If AOS REALLY wants to be inclusive, and not offend anyone, how about we stop 
offending half of the human population?

 

Done with my rant. Probably.

Susan Rosine

Brighton

 

 

On Thu, Nov 2, 2023, 5:13 PM Bonnie Morgan <compassrose...@gmail.com 
<mailto:compassrose...@gmail.com> > wrote:

why aren't we worried about renaming birds named for women's body parts?

 

On Thu, Nov 2, 2023, 6:28 PM Evan Wilder <evan.d.burg...@gmail.com 
<mailto:evan.d.burg...@gmail.com> > wrote:

Robert, 

 

What if we instead consider this issue from the perspective of an ever-evolving 
scientific community? We failed to acknowledge the destructive effects of 
colonialism and racism in the past, but we have a chance to improve upon that 
now. If we choose to “pause” our evolution now, when might it be more prudent 
to resume?

 

It's undeniable that America's history has been fraught with racism. This 
effort by the AOS specifically shines a light on the colonial disparities that 
saturated the 19th century. I will quote below a paragraph from the AOS's full 
report 
<https://americanornithology.org/about/english-bird-names-project/english-bird-names-committee-recommendations/>
  on the naming decision.

 

"A disproportionate number of eponyms were coined in the American West in the 
mid-1800s. One member of the committee found that, of the 78 eponyms in Tier 1 
[the first wave of names being analyzed], 62% are from the West, primarily the 
Southwest; 77% of these were named between 1825 and 1875. Prior to that time 
and place, eponyms were relatively rare: Only 9 of the potentially 78 eponyms 
in Tier 1 were named before 1825. The eponyms from the American West largely 
honor and were conferred by “soldier scientists” traveling with the U.S. Army 
during the Mexican-American War and various Indian wars."

 

Since the American Ornithological Society published extensively about its 
decisions, let me bring a few more of their points into the conversation. 
Quoted segments are from the same report quoted above 
<https://americanornithology.org/about/english-bird-names-project/english-bird-names-committee-recommendations/>
 .

*       Eponymous names are poor descriptors. Names that describe the bird 
(e.g., Spotted Sandpiper, Red-breasted Nuthatch), its habitat (e.g., Marsh 
Wren, Pinyon Jay), its range (e.g. Eastern Wood-Pewee, Mexican Chickadee), or 
something else about the species (e.g., Fish Crow, Northern Mockingbird) convey 
more information.
*       Alternative methods of naming nature that do not imply ownership should 
be used. Eponyms, bestowed as honors and awards to specific people, not only 
ignore and conceal attributes of birds, they imply ownership or possession of 
an entire species by one human.
*       We must also ask ourselves whose history we are commemorating through 
this list of names. Equating these names with the history of ornithology, or 
implying that ornithological history will be lost with the changing of these 
names, disregards the contributions and knowledge of populations that are not 
represented.
*       Instability from such accepted name changes is regularly tolerated and 
expected across users of bird names.Name changes occur annually, and dozens of 
name changes occurred in 1957 and 1973 (American Ornithologists’ Union 1957, 
Eisenmann et al. 1973).

Many eponymous bird names came about by being the first white man to "discover" 
the species and codify the name within standard scientific taxonomy, which has 
historically been overseen by white men as well. The natural history and 
scientific history of birds goes well beyond this homogeneous approach, and 
maintaining our current naming system diminishes the role of birds in America's 
pre-colonial past – and the role of indigenous peoples in caring for them and 
their habitats.

 

Thank you for your time.

- Evan

 

On Thu, Nov 2, 2023 at 3:28 PM Robert Righter <rorigh...@earthlink.net 
<mailto:rorigh...@earthlink.net> > wrote:

Hi: 

 

I would hope the American Ornithological Union would pause before changing 
common names of birds that are named after historic ornithologists as that 
could be divisive . Currently we are living in a period of time where 
accusations of racism are rampant and consequently we are currently judging 
past historic figures based on our current definition of how racist they may 
have been. This is how history becomes distorted and historic individuals 
unfortunately become misjudged. Let’s wait a decade or so and revisit the topic 
again when hopefully our lenses are clearer, less tainted. Why are we in such 
the rush to change the common names of birds that have been established for 
centuries. We all need to take a deep breath or two and wait to see what 
transpires.

 

Bob Righter

Denver, CO

 

 

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