A code for area names 18 Jun 2008 One of the most important documents published in zoology in the 19th century was in fact a rather mundane one: The Strickland Code: Hugh. E. Strickland, John Phillips, John Richardson, Richard Owen, Leonard Jenyns, William J. Broderip, John S. Henslow, William E. Shuckard, George R. Waterhouse, William Yarrell, Charles R. Darwin, and John O. Westwood, “Report of a Committee Appointed “To Consider of the Rules by Which the Nomenclature of Zoology May Be Established on a Uniform and Permanent Basis”,” Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1842, 1843: 105-21. Note the inclusion of one Charles R. Darwin there, along with luminaries like Owen and Henslow. This document formed the basis for what evolved (sorry) into the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, or ICZN. It also affected the development of a similar code for Botany. Now another similar code for the naming of biogeographic areas has been published. It allows standard names for units of area that will allow commensuration between biodiversity measures, among other things. One thing that bothers me is the inclusion of ranks for regional names. This has ever been a bone of contention in biological nomenclature, with people getting to the point that the ranks have been regarded by some (Agassiz) as the objective truth about taxa. Even less justification exists, I think, apart from convenience, in using ranks in geographical names. So long as it is understood by all to be conventional, that’s fine, but I bet we are about to see 150 years of debates over the concept of district and whether it is more natural than a province. Ecology and Biodiversity Evolution Species and systematics
Administrative News from Ediacara 27 Oct 2008 The Ediacaran period is the era between around 635Mybp and 540Mybp, just before the Cambrian. You pronounce it “ed-ee-ack-a-ran”. It is also the name of a new blog by the inimitable Chris Nedin, erstwhile paleontologist who specialised in the Ediacaran fauna before joining the Dark Side (federal public service) in… Read More
Ecology and Biodiversity The mind of the ecological engineer 27 Oct 201127 Oct 2011 I watched a very interesting documentary episode recently, entitled “All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace” (a phrase of poet Richard Brautigan’s), in which the maker Adam Curtis put forward the view that ecology was founded (at least in its modern iteration) in direct analogy with the view of… Read More
Ecology and Biodiversity Couple of organismic blogs 20 Jun 2007 No! Not orgasmic! [There, that should bump up the hits] You all know, of course, the inestimable Darren Naish and his wonderful blog Tetrapod Zoology. What? You don’t? Go there immediately and come back when you’ve read it all, and the old site too. [Fifteen days later] So, I wanted… Read More
Of course district is more natural than province! I don’t really believe that, but I thought it might be helpful to get started straight away.
No, province is much more natural. It’s easy to look down one’s nose at a provincial, but it makes no sense to do the same to a districter.
No, province is much more natural. It’s easy to look down one’s nose at a provincial, but it makes no sense to do the same to a districter.
No, province is much more natural. It’s easy to look down one’s nose at a provincial, but it makes no sense to do the same to a districter.
No, province is much more natural. It’s easy to look down one’s nose at a provincial, but it makes no sense to do the same to a districter.
I prefer region, except on thursdays, when domain rules. Just because the world was created on last thursday.
I prefer region, except on thursdays, when domain rules. Just because the world was created on last thursday.
I prefer region, except on thursdays, when domain rules. Just because the world was created on last thursday.
I prefer region, except on thursdays, when domain rules. Just because the world was created on last thursday.
As I suspected, one of the authors contacted me to say that they included it for reasons of utility rather than as a theoretical claim, and that it is not compulsory. It’s more a codification of what people already do. But experience tells me we will have the Sepkoski fallacy at some point. Sepkoski compared ranks to derive his kill rate figures, using families and genera. Since these are entirely arbitrary ranks, the figures are suspect. Wait for Conservation International or somebody to start using provinces as a comparator…
As I suspected, one of the authors contacted me to say that they included it for reasons of utility rather than as a theoretical claim, and that it is not compulsory. It’s more a codification of what people already do. But experience tells me we will have the Sepkoski fallacy at some point. Sepkoski compared ranks to derive his kill rate figures, using families and genera. Since these are entirely arbitrary ranks, the figures are suspect. Wait for Conservation International or somebody to start using provinces as a comparator…