Webster
@Webster

#BirdNamesForBirds wins!

The American Ornithological Society, which is the organization responsible for standardizing English bird names across the Americas, announced on Wednesday that it would rename all species honoring people. Bird names derived from people, the society said in a statement, can be harmful, exclusive and detract from “the focus, appreciation or consideration of the birds themselves.”

That means the Audubon’s shearwater, a bird found off the coast of the southeastern United States, will no longer have a name acknowledging James John Audubon, a famous bird illustrator and a slave owner who adamantly opposed abolition. The Scott’s oriole, a black-and-yellow bird inhabiting the Southwest and Mexico, will also receive a new moniker, which will sever ties to the U.S. Civil War general Winfield Scott, who oversaw the forced relocation of Indigenous peoples in 1838 that eventually became the Trail of Tears.

The organization’s decision is a response to pressure from birders to redress the recognition of historical figures with racist or colonial pasts. The renaming process will aim for more descriptive names about the birds’ habitats or physical features and is part of a broader push in science for more welcoming, inclusive environments.


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in reply to @Webster's post:

This is honestly fantastic news. There's a similar movement in medicine to rename body parts that are named after people, and not only does it get rid of the ones that are named after really awful people, and the weird thing where it sounds like that person invented or owns a human organ... but it's so much easier to understand! The only way to know where the "Fallopian tubes" are is to memorize it - but you can probably guess with no outside knowledge what the "uterine tubes" are attached to.