Should the unthinkable happen (god forbid), naming the lumped species something like Magnificent, Splendid, or Superb Antbird might go a small way towards easing the pain.This is just crazy talk![]()
Should the unthinkable happen (god forbid), naming the lumped species something like Magnificent, Splendid, or Superb Antbird might go a small way towards easing the pain.This is just crazy talk![]()
“I am troubled by the eagerness of WGAC to influence change when the cases are woefully under-sampled. In fact, I question the point of the WGAC efforts completely: to try to get all the major world checklists aligned is a fool’s errand. The authors of all these competing checklists clearly don’t use the same criteria for determining species limits, or they would all already match, and most would be superfluous… but they don’t match, and different users use these lists depending on their own ideologies and purposes. And that we in SACC are asked to vote on cases, when other checklists have already made up their minds, suggests that we are still able to disagree with those checklists, and thus will not fall into line with the other WGAC members, correct? So…. What’s the point here? In most cases, the evidence available simply isn’t sufficient to allow us to make an informed decision by SACC’s usual standards, so either we abandon those standards, or we are forced to settle for substandard or (more often) entirely incomplete evidence. This may not matter to many checklist users (some or most of whom just want more species to tick off), but it does mean that any student looking for a potential project will simply assume that many of these poorly supported scenarios are “already settled” when in fact they are very much not. To me, that is a harmful side effect of jumping to conclusions without sufficient evidence.”
Agree with this: "to try to get all the major world checklists aligned is a fool’s errand"Interesting comment concerning the WGAC embedded here in the decisions at the end:
"Comments from Lane: “NO. Whereas I suspect that a more thorough study of this complex will uncover the evidence necessary to support this proposed taxonomic change, the evidence simply isn’t available right now.
“I am troubled by the eagerness of WGAC to influence change when the cases are woefully under-sampled. In fact, I question the point of the WGAC efforts completely: to try to get all the major world checklists aligned is a fool’s errand. The authors of all these competing checklists clearly don’t use the same criteria for determining species limits, or they would all already match, and most would be superfluous… but they don’t match, and different users use these lists depending on their own ideologies and purposes. And that we in SACC are asked to vote on cases, when other checklists have already made up their minds, suggests that we are still able to disagree with those checklists, and thus will not fall into line with the other WGAC members, correct? So…. What’s the point here? In most cases, the evidence available simply isn’t sufficient to allow us to make an informed decision by SACC’s usual standards, so either we abandon those standards, or we are forced to settle for substandard or (more often) entirely incomplete evidence. This may not matter to many checklist users (some or most of whom just want more species to tick off), but it does mean that any student looking for a potential project will simply assume that many of these poorly supported scenarios are “already settled” when in fact they are very much not. To me, that is a harmful side effect of jumping to conclusions without sufficient evidence.”
The trouble with Myrmornis Hermann, 1783 and Myrmornithinae Sundevall, 1872. (Steven M.S. Gregory, Edward C. Dickinson & Paul van Els, Avian Systematics 2(VI): N33–N53, 30 July 2024)
ABSTRACT: The genus-group name Myrmornis Hermann, 1783, and the family-group name Myrmornithinae Sundevall, 1872, are problematic, and both are shown to be other than as currently defined and used. In the case of Myrmornis, Hermann introduced two valid binominal names (Myrmornis campanisona and Myrmornis arada), which are the only available names from which a type species can be selected, but neither corresponds to the accepted type species cited by Peters (1951: 255), where “Fourmilier proprement dit” was cited from Buffon (1778: 473) together with “Le Fourmillier de Cayanne” based on plate 700 fig. 1 in Daubenton, which was identified with Formicarius torquatus Boddaert, 1783 by Hellmayr in Cory and Hellmayr (1924: 321). The use of vernacular names as type species is contrary to Opinion 1 (ICZN, 1907) and Article 12.3 (ICZN, 1999) where they are explicitly excluded from being an indication. In the case of Myrmornithinae Sundevall, 1872, Sundevall used ‘Myrmornis’ (for Formicarius colma Boddaert, 1783) in a manner not consistent with either of the two originally included nominal species, and any use as a family-group name must be seen as an altered concept as dictated by Article 65.2.1 (ICZN, 1999). In seeking a genus-group name to replace ‘Myrmornis’ it is suggested that Rhopoterpe Cabanis, 1847, which has extensive use as a valid name both before and after 1899, be reinstated as the valid name under the Principle of Priority, Article 23.1 (ICZN, 1999: 24). This action would see Formicarius torquatus changed to Rhopoterpe torquata (Boddaert, 1783), with the available family-group name Rhopoterpinae Ridgway, 1911, replacing the recent use of Myrmornithinae Sundevall, 1872.
Moreover, his name would fit better than Rhopoterpe for the "Fourmilier proprement dit" 😅
- and Formicivorus is the older one.
So Rhopoterpe would have had to be used at least 50 years after 1899/1900?
- . But Rhopoterpe Cabanis 1847 had not been used as a valid name a single time between 1918 and today, thus it does not remotely qualify to be made a nomen protectum relative to the other two, and no reversal of precedence is possible. .
So Rhopoterpe would have had to be used at least 50 years after 1899/1900?
This is the part I don't understand. In the last 50 years, this name had to be used for at least 10 years 🤔encompassing a span of not less than 10 years.
This is the part I don't understand.
Ok. This is the part that was the least clear
- "and encompassing a span of not less than 10 years" (= there must be at least 10 years between the publications of the first and the last of the 25 works).
Ok. This is the part that was the least clear
Interesting comment concerning the WGAC embedded here in the decisions at the end:
"Comments from Lane: “NO. Whereas I suspect that a more thorough study of this complex will uncover the evidence necessary to support this proposed taxonomic change, the evidence simply isn’t available right now.
“I am troubled by the eagerness of WGAC to influence change when the cases are woefully under-sampled. In fact, I question the point of the WGAC efforts completely: to try to get all the major world checklists aligned is a fool’s errand. The authors of all these competing checklists clearly don’t use the same criteria for determining species limits, or they would all already match, and most would be superfluous… but they don’t match, and different users use these lists depending on their own ideologies and purposes. And that we in SACC are asked to vote on cases, when other checklists have already made up their minds, suggests that we are still able to disagree with those checklists, and thus will not fall into line with the other WGAC members, correct? So…. What’s the point here? In most cases, the evidence available simply isn’t sufficient to allow us to make an informed decision by SACC’s usual standards, so either we abandon those standards, or we are forced to settle for substandard or (more often) entirely incomplete evidence. This may not matter to many checklist users (some or most of whom just want more species to tick off), but it does mean that any student looking for a potential project will simply assume that many of these poorly supported scenarios are “already settled” when in fact they are very much not. To me, that is a harmful side effect of jumping to conclusions without sufficient evidence.”
Did not passSACC proposal 1024: Treat Rhegmatorhina berlepschi (Harlequin Antbird) as conspecific with R. hoffmannsi (White-breasted Antbird)
Them's fighting words!
I count four YES votes in favour of the lump (including Mark Robbins, who voted NO but whose comments clearly indicate he meant YES to the lump) and five NO votes (maintain the status quo and keep them split), so I guess it does mean it did not pass.Did not pass