To this end, I thought I'd add (in the nicest way possible!) that some new editors may want to not get ahead of themselves when adding taxa that don't have pages yet. For example, the Western Atlantic subspecies of Harbor Seal does not yet have a page on ZTL and, until this evening, neither did the East Pacific subspecies. Yet, many entries for Harbor Seals have been uploaded to the European subspecies instead, presumably because they're both Atlantic(?). I'd suggest that this is a little counterintuitive, as it will require admins/others to go back and move all these entries once a page for the West Atlantic subspecies is created. It's probably a lot easier all around to just wait until the proper taxa page is created.
Similarly, I've noticed there's been a rush to get bottlenose dolphin entries onto ZTL under nominate
truncatus despite it being discussed here on the forum (including just the other day by the VP of Zoological Operations at SeaWorld) that there aren't any purebred nominate
truncatus in the United States, they're all either
erebennus or hybrids. What's the point of adding all these entries if they only need to be transferred/deleted once a proper page is made for
erebennus and/or
Tursiops (sensu lato)?
The ZTL admins are doubtlessly working extremely hard to update the site with all these new collections and species/subspecies pages. Perhaps we can have a little more patience on getting stuff added to the database only when the appropriate pages are available? We're waiting this long for US ZTL after all, we can wait a little longer!
~Thylo