I think the visceral reaction of many really has nothing to do with names, but 
with simple concept of a large change from what they know.  Many birds have 
been named, renamed and changed over the last 100 years, but people only 
remember and feel attached to the one they learned when they started birding, 
or the one they know now.  Yes, there will be a big adjustment and for some it 
may seem overwhelming to think about remembering 150 new names…but I actually 
think some, if not most, of the new names will be big improvements as far as 
being more about the bird than some historical figure that many don’t know 
anything about. 

New birders will learn the new names and have no specific attachment to 
Harris’s Hawk compared to Bay-winged Hawk.  Harris’s tells us nothing of the 
bird.  Bay-winged is informative.

I don’t personally think renaming will specifically change who is attracted to 
birding or if someone stays at it, but I do think descriptive names are 
actually more beneficial for new birders for learning.  Thicket Vireo certainly 
helps one understand habitat of the species much more than Bell’s Vireo ever 
has.  I look forward to saying the more descriptive names of Yucca Oriole, 
Sedge Sparrow, Ice Bunting, and Desert Quail (of course these examples are not 
formally accepted names, but ideas I have seen being tossed around on various 
groups).   

I don’t think there is anything specifically beneficial to anyone by having 
bird’s (or any animal) named after people.  I admit I have rarely taken time to 
researched the names behind the birds they are named after, but am much more 
interested in their ecology, habitat and behavior, which can be incorporated in 
these new names. In some cases the new names might help with conservation 
efforts by showing a species dependence on an endangered or declining habitats.

I think and hope that in a handful of years most will look back on the changes 
favorably after they get used to the new names and have adjusted to them.


Cathy Sheeter
www.cathysheeter.com
Aurora, CO 

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