Proposal (402) to South
American Classification Committee
Remove hyphens from certain English names that do not
represent monophyletic groups
As part of the ongoing debate generated by Gill & Wright (2006) on
when to use hyphens in bird names, I asked Frank Gill to comb the SACC list for
hyphenated group-names that included species for which there is no evidence of
relationship.
FrankÕs search yielded the following names on the SACC list with hyphens
implying group relationship when none (presumably) exists:
(1)
Ochthornis littoralis Drab Water-Tyrant and the Fluvicola Water-Tyrants (3 species)
(2) Urothraupis stolzmanni Black-backed Bush-Tanager; Cnemoscopus rubrirostris Gray-hooded
Bush-Tanager; and the 7 species of Chlorospingus
bush-tanagers.
ParkesÕ (1978) the rationale for use of hyphens fits for Fluvicola and Chlorospingus, the hyphen here uniting presumed monophyletic
groups. For example, Great Blue
Heron and Little Blue Heron are not hyphenated because there is no proposed
group relationship between them.
To remedy this grave problem, I propose removing the hyphens in the
English names in Ochthornis
littoralis, Urothraupis stolzmanni, and Cnemoscopus rubrirostris (and retaining them in Fluvicola and Chlorospingus).
Literature Cited
GILL, F. B., AND M. WRIGHT. 2006. Birds of the World. Recommended English names. Princeton
Univ. Press, Princeton.
PARKES, K. C. 1978. Guide to forming and capitalizing compound names of birds in English
names. Auk 95: 324-326.
Van (Hyphens
Are My Life) Remsen, July 2009
Comments from Zimmer: ÒYES for
removing the hyphens in the English names in Ochthornis littoralis, Urothraupis stolzmanni, and Cnemoscopus rubrirostris (and retaining them
in Fluvicola and Chlorospingus, where they do unite members of a monophyletic
group).Ó
Comments from Stotz: ÒYES. Huge conceptual breakthrough for Neotropical ornithology.Ó
Comments from Stiles: ÒYES. Here, I
agree with Kevin – Bush-Tanager is fine for Chlorospingus and
Water-Tyrant for Fluvicola, both of which represent monophyletic groups so far
as I am aware; remove the hyphens for the others, which are Òone-offsÓ in
genera (often monotypic) unrelated
to these.Ó