John Wright

The Naming of the Shrew

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  • Беатаhas quoted6 years ago
    Many Latin names are as descriptive as these two, but some are particularly evocative. What better name for the venomous puff adder could there be than Bitis arietans (‘striking, biting thing’) – other than perhaps Lachesis muta, which belongs to the South American bushmaster and means ‘silent fate’? The Canadian porcupine goes by the perfect name of Erethizon dorsatum – ‘having an irritating back’. However, as this book will reveal at length, many scientific names are as useless as Troglodytes troglodytes troglodytes (‘hole burrower hole burrower hole burrower’, the burdensome name of the northern wren) and Puffinus puffinus, which is, of course, the name of the Manx shearwater.
  • Беатаhas quoted6 years ago
    Although similar constructions are familiar in English – ‘black duck’ and ‘wood sorrel’, for example, where ‘duck’ and ‘sorrel’ can be viewed roughly as genera – endless problems would occur in any attempt to formalise them in a taxonomy. Wood sorrel and common sorrel are only very distantly related, while the black duck is in the same genus as the mallard, the garganey, the teal and the wigeon but in a different genus to the tufted duck. These common names are useful in their way, but they fail to tell us anything about the organisms’ relationships with other species, and most would have to be dispensed with in any officially approved list. We would perhaps have the ‘teal duck’, the ‘wigeon duck’ and the ‘tufted scaup’ (to borrow a common name from its close relative), but I have no idea what we could do with the sorrels.
  • Беатаhas quoted6 years ago
    While I don’t mind telling someone that the little mushroom in their hand is called Tubaria furfuracea, I do feel embarrassed when informing them that they have a ‘scurfy twiglet’. There is nothing particularly wrong with these names, but they lack the weight and authority that comes with long usage. Also, I don’t think they really help: if people are having difficulty with names, the last thing they need is a whole new set of them. In my opinion, it is simply not possible to make up common names and expect them to become a useful currency.
  • Беатаhas quoted6 years ago
    The Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 introduced the requirement that all UK species in need of protection have a common English name.* While nearly all British plants and large animals were possessed of one, most fungi were not, so the British Mycological Society set about creating ‘common’ names for all but the most obscure.2 Some of them put my own inventions to shame. We now have the dung cannon (Pilobolus crystallinus), the cabbage parachute (Micromphale brassicolens), the crystal brain (Exidia nucleata), the mousepee pinkgill (Entoloma incanum) and, my personal favourite, the midnight disco (Pachyella violaceonigra).
  • Беатаhas quoted6 years ago
    Unfortunately the everyday names of plants, fungi and animals do not travel well. For example, what is now usually known as the guelder rose (Viburnum opulus) is the Lancastrian’s dogwood, the Kentishman’s gatterbush, the Somersetshireman’s mugget and the Gloucestershireman’s king’s crown. I rather like the name they give it on the Isle of Wight – ‘stink tree’: a highly appropriate name, as I know to my cost, because the berries smell (and taste) of sick.
  • Беатаhas quoted6 years ago
    The names themselves are the heroes of this book, and I have taken examples from botany, zoology, phycology (algae), bacteriology and more. However, I make no apology for a blatant preference for the names of fungi. I like fungi.
  • Беатаhas quoted6 years ago
    My early interest in natural history (thank you Julia, wherever you are) blossomed into a lifelong passion for fungi, and the purpose of Latin names became clear. They are a universal currency across cultures and languages, providing consistent names for both familiar organisms and those organisms that neither have a common name nor ever will. Without Latin names, chaos would rule the science of biology.
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