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Inside the Movement to Abolish Colonialist Bird Names
Outside ^ | 2-12-21 | Nathalie Alonso

Posted on 02/12/2021 11:51:17 AM PST by SJackson

Last year, the American Ornithological Society accepted a proposal to rename a bird linked to a racist figure. And there's more where that came from.

ast summer, amid a national reckoning with systemic racism, the American Ornithological Society (AOS) accepted a proposal to rename McCown’s longspur, a grassland bird that was originally named after Confederate general John Porter McCown. The species is now called the thick-billed longspur. It marked the first time the organization agreed to change a bird’s name because it was racially offensive.

That proposal, along with ongoing conversations about racial injustice, inspired Maryland-based ornithologists and birders Jordan Rutter and Gabriel Foley to dig deeper into the origins of eponymous bird names—the term for birds named after a particular person. They found that of the more than 2,000 bird species in North America, another 149 had eponymous names, most of which were assigned by European and American naturalists in the 19th century, at the height of colonialism and American westward expansion. A number of those names enshrine figures associated with slavery and white supremacy.

It was a revelation.

“I have been a lifelong birder,” Rutter says. “I took ornithology in college, did my master’s on birds, and I never got that information.”

In June, she and Foley wrote a letter to the AOS and its North American Classification Committee, the group that oversees avian nomenclature from Canada to Panama. In the letter, they compared the honorific names to “verbal statues” and called for the removal of all eponymous bird names. They then got 180 members of the birding and ornithology communities to sign it. It has since grown into a full-blown campaign, which Rutter and Foley are calling Bird Names for Birds, with a petition that garnered more than 2,500 signatures and an endorsement from the nonprofit American Bird Conservancy. The AOS is currently evaluating the issue.

Some of the eponyms Rutter and Foley want removed honor enslavers like former U.S. surgeon general William Alexander Hammond (Hammond’s flycatcher) and the Reverend John Bachman (Bachman’s sparrow, Bachman’s warbler). Other birds are named after people who subscribed to the pseudoscience of phrenology, including John Kirk Townsend (Townsend’s solitaire, Townsend’s warbler), who plundered skulls from Native American grave sites in the 1800s.

But Rutter and Foley say the AOS shouldn’t just stop at renaming those species. They want all eponyms removed, because naming birds after white people who “discovered” them is a fundamentally colonial practice, they say. They also argue that all of these historical figures are inextricably tied to colonialism, whether or not they directly engaged in the subjugation of people of color. “We cannot subjectively decide—especially if the adjudicators are White—that some names can be retained because they are associated with less abhorrent pasts than others,” Rutter and Foley wrote in an op-ed that appeared in the Washington Post in August. “We must remove all eponymous names. The stench of colonialism has saturated each of its participants, and the honor inherent within their names must be revoked.”

Only a handful of eponymous bird names don’t commemorate colonial figures—Klaas’s cuckoo, for example, was named after a member of the Indigenous Khoekhoen people of southwestern Africa by 18th-century French ornithologist Francois Levaillant—while others are of unknown origin.

But Rutter and Foley also cite a practical reason for removing these bird names: eponyms don’t convey any valuable information that could help an observer identify a bird. “Instead of celebrating that a bird is unique in nature, you’re celebrating the fact that it was discovered by this dude,” Foley says.

Rutter and Foley believe the new names should reflect the features of the species or its habitat, as most bird names already do. “A red-winged blackbird—you know what the bird looks like,” Foley says. “It’s probably got red wings and it’s probably black.”

Changing bird names has not proven so simple, though. Historically, the AOS has been conservative when it comes to altering bird names, prioritizing stability over other concerns. (For instance, name changes require updating field guides.) Ornithologists are especially careful to keep scientific names consistent: if you change a bird’s Latin name, it becomes hard to search through databases when doing research. That’s why Rutter and Foley are calling for changes only to common names, which they note are often updated for taxonomic reasons—for example, when scientists discover new information about a bird that leads them to classify it under a different species.

The official approach to bird names has evolved over the years. In 2000, the American Ornithologists Union, a precursor to the AOS, decided to rename a duck whose original name was a derogatory term for Native American women. It’s now known as the long-tailed duck. At the time, the group said the move was “to conform with English usage in other parts of the world” rather than out of “political correctness.” In 2019, the AOS rejected an earlier proposal to rename the McCown’s longspur, in large part because there was no policy in place for changing a name based on offensiveness. However, the group revised its policy later that year so that an English bird name that causes “sufficient offense” could be changed solely on those grounds.

In the past year, the conversation about bird names has taken on a particular sense of urgency. Last May, the discrimination that Black birders often encounter came to the fore after an incident in New York City’s Central Park in which a white woman called the police on a Black bird-watcher who asked her to put her dog on a leash. That episode sparked conversations about the need to make birding more welcoming for people of color and prompted initiatives like Black Birders Week, a series of virtual events that highlighted Black naturalists and birders. Rutter and Foley see their campaign as part of a larger effort to make birding more inclusive.

Among the signers of the Bird Names for Birds petition is Jason Ward, a self-taught Black birder who hosted the 2019 documentary series Birds of North America and was recently named the American Bird Conservancy’s chief diversity officer. Ward believes that allowing offensive bird names to persist could discourage a new generation of nature enthusiasts from getting involved. “Anything that serves as a potential roadblock for younger, diverse birders to join the flock is something that I’m against,” he says.

The AOS is currently determining how to approach the concerns raised by the Bird Names for Birds campaign. In an email, executive director Melinda Pruett-Jones told Outside that the organization’s diversity and inclusion committee has conducted more than ten “listening sessions” with stakeholders in the birding and ornithology community over the past several months, with a larger forum in the works for early this year.

“We asked for their thoughts on the philosophy of names, the issues to be considered when changing them, and the effects of bird-name changes on key issues including research, recreation, management, and the publication of field guides,” Pruett-Jones wrote, adding that the AOS recently formed an advisory group on English bird names, which includes members of several existing committees, and is in the process of defining its role.

Currently, the North American Classification Committee considers changes to bird names on a case-by-case basis. Anyone can submit a proposal requesting an individual name change. However, since writing and reviewing proposals for each of the 149 species with eponymous names would be time-consuming, Rutter and Foley’s letter asked the committee to use its authority to review all of those names collectively. “Right now, the only real thing that’s stopping this is willpower,” Rutter says.

Rutter and Foley also hope their campaign will help spur changes to the process by which bird names are chosen, noting that the 13-member classification committee is composed mostly of white men. “It’s basically the same way that it’s been since colonization—a bunch of white guys who are deciding what all the names will be,” Foley says. “We’d like to see that become more inclusive.”


TOPICS: Outdoors
KEYWORDS: birdbrains
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To: SJackson

Darwins finches were named after a Racist.


21 posted on 02/12/2021 12:20:42 PM PST by joshhiggins
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To: SJackson

Why not just call them birds? And the guys working this worthless project, birdbrains?


22 posted on 02/12/2021 12:22:22 PM PST by Midwesterner53
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To: SJackson

“ change a bird’s name because it was racially offensive.”

That is ridiculous. There is nothing racially offensive about it. The offensive part is the snowflakery.


23 posted on 02/12/2021 12:22:40 PM PST by bk1000 (Banned from Breitbart)
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To: SJackson

Great idea but can we keep the Apple Rotten to the Core memes?


24 posted on 02/12/2021 12:25:46 PM PST by Reno89519 (Buy American, Hire American! End All Worker Visa Programs. Replace Visa Workers w/ American Worker)
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To: forgotten man
#5: "The yellow rump warblers are probably targeted for a name change."


25 posted on 02/12/2021 12:29:00 PM PST by Governor Dinwiddie (Guide me, O my great Redeemer, pilgrim through this barren land.)
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To: SJackson

Obviously all scientific names must go next. They use Latin, the racist language of white oppressors and Carl Linnaeus was white.


26 posted on 02/12/2021 12:34:58 PM PST by reg45 (Barack 0bama: Gone but not forgiven.)
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To: SJackson

Fascinating story from the woman living in New York. You know New York, the city named after the British monarch who headed the royal African company that ran the slave trade?

Another walk idiot snowflake.


27 posted on 02/12/2021 12:36:59 PM PST by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. .... )
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To: SJackson

Would Swallows be included in this name changing policy? What if they are unladen? Does this apply to African Species or just European?


28 posted on 02/12/2021 12:39:08 PM PST by Radix (Natural Born Citizens have Citizen parents )
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To: SJackson

OK, let’s just stick with whatever the native americans called them — “birds.”

Well, maybe their taxonomy was more detailed than that. Maybe they said “Big bird” and “little bird.” Maybe even “big red bird” and “little black bird.”

We can get down to maybe 10 or 20 generic names and be done with it. Once we are done with that, universities can fire all their ornithologists and use the savings to endow more chairs in the “Department of Woke Studies.”

One downside is retirees would have to find a new hobby. Maybe they could join the legions of wokesters and every morning wake up wondering “What can I be offended by today?” They can take adult education classes in wokesterism and write papers on “Things I’m Offended By.” I can’t think of a more rewarding hobby in retirement.


29 posted on 02/12/2021 12:43:56 PM PST by ProtectOurFreedom (Life is short, and work long, opportunity fleeting, experiments dangerous, and judgment hard)
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To: SJackson

More attempts to completely remove whites from American culture. And no one is doing anything to counter it. From math being racist to birds named after white folk. We are being erased from our own country. Mostly by I’m ashamed to be white progressives. What’s next and when do we say enough? We’ve been ignoring it and laughing at these people for a generation. They aren’t ignoring us and they aren’t laughing. This is serious to them and they are winning.


30 posted on 02/12/2021 12:44:07 PM PST by redangus
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To: SJackson

I’m not a birder but I can attest to this madness.

I like looking at pics of pretty or unusual birds, so I’ve looked at the Audubon magazine and tried to follow them on the Twit, but it’s not at all about birds anymore, it’s about, “How can we use birds to display our total BLM woke-ism?” And the CLIMATE CRISIS of course!!

They discovered Audubon himself was a slave owner and so when I asked on Twitter whether the Audubon Society should cancel itself, they blocked me. Bwahahaha.


31 posted on 02/12/2021 12:46:32 PM PST by GnuThere
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To: Radix

Would feminists find that name offensive? I’m just saying.


32 posted on 02/12/2021 12:49:04 PM PST by redangus
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To: SJackson

[[But Rutter and Foley say]]

Weren’t there some fellas who were racists or colonists named rutter and foley way back when? Should we demand that these fellas now change their names?


33 posted on 02/12/2021 12:50:04 PM PST by Bob434
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To: SJackson

Should a Barn Swallow be called a Castle Chew just in case someone has a thing against barns?


34 posted on 02/12/2021 12:50:56 PM PST by Exit148
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To: DesertRhino

See my post 17, we’re thinking the same.


35 posted on 02/12/2021 12:53:55 PM PST by SJackson (If they bring a knife to the fight, we bring a gun...folks in Philly like a good brawl, BH Obama)
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To: forgotten man
The yellow rump warblers are probably targeted for a name change. There has to be at least one liberal who will call that name a racist slur against Asian people.

Inconceivable. Asians don't have rumps.

36 posted on 02/12/2021 12:57:21 PM PST by TangoLimaSierra
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To: SJackson
I'm a history buff and have studied the Civil War, but have never heard of this McCown.

But, from Wiki: McCown was relieved of his command as the commanding general of the Army and was tried and found guilty of disobedience of orders on March 16, and sentenced to suspension from duty for a period of six months.[1] McCown declared the Confederacy was nothing more than "a damned stinking cotton oligarchy... gotten up for the benefit of Isham G. Harris and Jefferson Davis and their damned corrupt cliques.""

Hard to see how naming a bird for a guy nobody heard of who criticized Jeff Davis after being cashiered by the Confederate Army would offend anyone. Cancel Culture running amok again.

37 posted on 02/12/2021 12:59:48 PM PST by colorado tanker
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To: SJackson

Cancel the whole use of Latin in naming species too. I hear slavery was a big thing with the Romans


38 posted on 02/12/2021 1:00:01 PM PST by Long Jon No Silver
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To: SJackson

We must remove all bird, animal, fish, insect names because whitey named them and get rid of the Latin designations because Romans were slave owners.

“Mom, what’s that thing there called that keeps making that funny humming noise when I pet it?”

“Ask you dad; it knows about those things.”


39 posted on 02/12/2021 1:03:37 PM PST by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now its your turn)
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To: SJackson
“I have been a lifelong birder,” Rutter says. “I took ornithology in college, did my master’s on birds, and I never got that information.”

How insensitive of him! I feel micro-aggressed!

Regards,

40 posted on 02/12/2021 1:06:35 PM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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