*sigh*
English common names are how people communicate about birds. In basically all circles. In ornithology right now, binomials are maintained only as a formality. The standardized English common names have essentially replaced the scientific names, largely because of the high number of amateurs interested in birds. So this change is essentially changing the scientific names of birds, as it is changing the names used internationally for scientific purposes. And this is also not on a small scale. In the AOS' jurisdiction, there are over 260 bird species with eponymous names, plus a few others that the Common Name Committee has said they would like to change that are not eponyms, such as Flesh-footed Shearwater and Inca Dove. This alone is enough to cause a major disruption of ornithological scientific literature. These names have had a huge degree of stability over the last century and have changed far less often than the binomials, meaning they are basically more useful in ever respect. Is this something we want to throw away?
It also makes communication a massive headache for the layperson too. And communication with the public. When it has taken so long for an endangered bird like Kirtland's Warbler to get good public relations, what happens when it becomes a Jackpine Bird? The vast majority of birders will not hear of the decisions, either, and many will continue to use the old name for a very, very long time. Where I live, most people still call harriers Marsh Hawks, a name that hasn't appeared on any official checklist since 1956. And we are supposed to believe these names will change overnight and clear up all the confusion right away?
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The main argument for these changes is to increase inclusion in birding. A noble goal for sure, and one I fully support. But I believe that this actually hurts inclusion. The confusion caused by the name change, suddenly useless field guides creates a knowledge gap, making birding less accessible. And if this change happens, how much will inclusion really increase. Are there any people who have thought: "I love birds, but I can't be interested in them because this hummingbird is named after someone named Anna"? No, and if there are, it's a tiny, tiny amount of people. If we wish to increase inclusion in birding, reaching out to minority communities, making birding areas more accessible, ect., would be a far better use of our time. This will only hurt accessibility and inclusion (and by extension, conservation, since more birders is positive for conservation).
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This whole situation is also deeply unpopular with birders themselves, as evidenced here:
https://osf.io/tnzya/.
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I agree that we should not create new eponyms during taxonomic splits, and I would personally support renaming a small handful of birds on a case-by-case basis (Scott's Oriole, Bachman's Sparrow, perhaps others), but this radical and ridiculous proposal has massive repercussions that will harm the birding community and conservation for many decades to come.
I honestly have a lot more to say on this subject, but I'd
really prefer not to discuss it anymore.