User talk:Roy Bateman

Image copyright problem with Image:Manual sprayer.jpg

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Speedy deletion of Ultra low volume

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Speedy deletion of Ultra-Low Volume

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April 2008

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Ecological pesticides

I replied to you about the ecological pesticides merge thing somewhere, but I can't find it. Basically I want to move all the ecological pesticides into one page. From there we can separate them if necessary, but I'm not sure it will be necessary for at least a little while. Right now there's like 3 or 4 "bio" pesticide articles out there. Too messy. ImperfectlyInformed | talk - contribs 03:11, 21 April 2008 (UTC)[reply]

speedy

A tag has been placed on Pesticide formulation, requesting that it be speedily deleted from Wikipedia. This has been done under the criteria for speedy deletion, because it is a very short article providing no content to the reader. Please note that external links, "See also" section, book reference, category tag, template tag, interwiki link, rephrasing of the title, or an attempt to contact the subject of the article don't count as content. Please see Wikipedia:Stub for our minimum information standards for short articles. Also please note that articles must be on notable subjects and should provide references to reliable sources that verify their content.

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reply

I wasn't fast enough before - this was indeed a bit of a stub, but surely a subject like this didn't warrant deletion!

Many thanks for recent edits (23 May) - cleaned up enough yet?

rgds Roy Bateman (talk) 15:41, 23 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Looks like you got caught up in a bit of beurocracy there Roy. Don't take it personally, administrators have to deal with a lot of dubious material everyday, and a legitimate but short article can sometimes be deleted in the crossfire. Since the article has been fleshed out, it's unlikely to be deleted again. Best regards, Jefffire (talk) 15:46, 23 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]

There's a lack of common sense in Wikipedia. ImpIn | {talk - contribs} 16:52, 23 May 2008 (UTC)[reply]

CCD, etc.

Given that there have been experiments showing symptoms similar to CCD from some neonics, there is at least a reason to not rule out pesticide effects in the CCD phenomenon. Not that pesticides cause CCD, but that pesticide effects might be confused with CCD. Of all the "alternative theories" that people have come up with, the pesticide one is about the only one that can't truly be ruled out entirely, but only for this reason - it certainly can't explain all the CCD cases from the 1970's and such, since that whole class of pesticides didn't even exist back then. But that doesn't mean they can't be playing a role now in creating problems for bees. It would be nice if someone would put this in print (that neonic poisoning could be mistaken for CCD), in which case we could remove the pesticide section from the CCD article and redirect readers elsewhere. In the meanwhile, good going with the edits. Dyanega (talk) 20:29, 19 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]


File copyright problem with File:LPA Serratia.JPG

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Hi, I've reverted your spelling changes of mould->mold in the Fungus article. The article is written using American English, and according to the WP:MOS, "When an article has evolved sufficiently for it to be clear which variety it employs, the whole article should continue to conform to that variety, unless there are reasons for changing it based on strong national ties to the topic." Further, it is not acceptable to change the spelling of titles of the sources (even if not consistent with the style of English spelling used in the Wiki article). Your other changes look fine (to me), but there are other editors who watch the article that might disagree later :) Cheers, Sasata (talk) 19:11, 21 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

OK Sasata - I confess that, though I have American mycologist friends I had never come across "mold" before and thought it was a mis-spelling!! I added a spelling differences phrase at the beginning for the benefit of others like me on this side of the pond. FYI I am about to do some edits to biological pesticides and set up a Lecanicillium lecanii page - can't believe it hasn't been done already - pointed out to me by confused students. Any peer review much appreciated. Brgds Roy Bateman (talk) 16:28, 24 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Hi, I was wanting to change the first sentence in the article from:

  • Lecanicillium lecanii is now an approved name of an entomopathogenic fungus species, that was previously widely known as Verticillium lecanii (Zimmerman) Viegas), but is now understood to be an anamorphic form in the Cordyceps group of genera in the Clavicipitaceae <ref>Zare R, Gams W. (2001) A revision of ''Verticillium'' sect. ''Prostrata''. III. Generic classification. Nova Hedwigia. '''72''': 329-337</ref>. ---->
  • Lecanicillium lecanii is an entomopathogenic fungus species, that was known previous to XXXX as Verticillium lecanii (Zimmerman) Viegas), but is now understood to be an anamorphic form in the Cordyceps group of genera in the Clavicipitaceae. <ref>Zare R, Gams W. (2001) A revision of ''Verticillium'' sect. ''Prostrata''. III. Generic classification. Nova Hedwigia. '''72''': 329-337</ref>

I was wondering if you could please fill in the XXXX with the year that it got the official name change. The edit, of course, is for the purpose of reducing the recentism feel. Thanks Passionless -Talk 01:39, 14 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Oh, I just saw your edit summary, is 2001 the XXXX? Passionless -Talk 01:40, 14 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]

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Good point - have corrected it. Roy Bateman (talk) 12:38, 18 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]

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OK - fixed - so had to sort out definition of 'pest' as well ... Roy Bateman (talk) 08:42, 22 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

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Rhizoctonia solani

Cite error: The named reference <ref name=""Roberts1999"" > were invoked but never defined >>> see https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rhizoctonia_solani&diff=572298893&oldid=543102361 Please fix - thanks --Frze > talk 23:10, 11 October 2013 (UTC)[reply]

I think this is now fixed - a good reference is: http://www.lsuagcenter.com/NR/rdonlyres/C93A494B-8105-4804-9DFA-81190EC3F68B/58166/pub3123ShealthBlightofRiceHIGHRES.pdf. Thanks Roy Bateman (talk) 10:57, 12 October 2013 (UTC)[reply]

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Lagerstroemia anisoptera

Howdy. Question about a rather old edit of yours please. In this edit, you removed Lagerstroemia anisoptera from Lagerstroemia#Selected species as part of a larger change with the edit summary " Added accepted spp. from The Plant List". The given source lists Lagerstroemia anisoptera when checked now, albeit with "Unresolved" status. I wanted to check your rational for removal; given that we have an article for Lagerstroemia anisoptera should it be on the list on Lagerstroemia? Cheers. - TB (talk) 18:06, 18 July 2015 (UTC) Hello TB. I can only think that must have been a mistake on my part (now restored) - for which I apologise. As I understand, the list is incomplete and I was keen to include all the species in [Cat Tien National Park] at the time ... it would be good to complete the list: http://zipcodezoo.com/Key/Plantae/Lagerstroemia_Genus.asp was a reference I found previously. Best Roy Bateman (talk) 04:51, 26 July 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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Standard section order for plant articles

Hi, I appreciate your edits to Tetrameles, but there's a standard order of sections agreed for plant articles – see Wikipedia:WikiProject Plants/Template (which is a bit over-the-top in its detail, in my view). It's important to source all vernacular names, just as other information in the article. If I can help or advise with editing Wikipedia articles in any way, please leave me a note on my talk page. Peter coxhead (talk) 14:24, 10 October 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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ana vs anna

Hi. I've turned 'anna' into a redirect to 'ana'. If you got it wrong, someone else looking for it might well do the same. Don't forget that if you do make a mess of a title, it's easiest to 'move' it to the proper title. This leaves a redirect automatically. If the mess is so bad no-one is likely to type it into search (baring in mind that a lotof peeple cant spel...), tag it with {{db-r3}} (recent implausible redirect) or {{db-g7}} (one author request for deletion). Moving keeps the creation history complete, which is most important when someone else has edited before you realise the mistake). For me, I'd have thought that annamensis would have been the right one (as the country used to be Annam), but both spellings seem to occur in various genera (as well as for the same species...) on Google. Peridon (talk) 14:41, 4 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]

I'm going to take a liberty and de-ref the floating references at the bottom of this page. The refs will still be there in the post, but they won't float. If you like them floating at the bottom, just undo my top edit in your history. Peridon (talk) 14:45, 4 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]

January 2017

Information icon Hello, I'm Zackmann08. Thank you for your recent contributions to Cycas inermis. I noticed that when you added the image to the infobox, you added it as a thumbnail. In the future, please do not use thumbnails when adding images to an infobox (see WP:INFOBOXIMAGE). What does this mean? Well in the infobox, when you specify the image you wish to use, instead of doing it like this:

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Talkback

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Plant geographical categories

Hello Roy Bateman, I just want to pass along some thoughts on these categories. For example with your edit here you added the category Category:Flora of Vietnam. However I think this is already covered with Category:Trees of Indo-China, of which Category:Trees of Vietnam is a subcategory. When a species is widely distributed in a region, as Xylia xylocarpa is in Indo-China, it's better to use the regional category. This saves adding a potentially long list of country categories where one regional category could suffice. If there are just a few countries, then it would be okay to list them individually. For example if the species were native only to Vietnam and Laos, then those country categories would be fine. I hope this helps a bit. Thanks Declangi (talk) 05:17, 21 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks Declangi. Indeed - I was wondering about the 'form' for categories: I have been working on the flora and fauna of Cat Tien National Park, and have set-up quite a number of new pages (and adding info. to existing ones like this). As well as categorising the taxonomy, I have tended to list these under Category:Flora of Vietnam - and should probably also included Category:Trees of Indo-China: these two sets will have mutually inclusive, but also excluded species of course. I suspect that people may look-up under "trees" or "flora", in which case, might it not be better to have both? Brgds Roy Roy Bateman (talk) 08:22, 21 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]
As far having both categories (a regional category and a category for a country within a region), this is not the recommended approach for plant articles. And in general, the Wikipedia guidelines for categories are to not place an article in both a parent and child category. WP:PLANTS/WGSRPD discusses the guidelines more specifically, saying for example (paraphrasing) "...a more limited distribution best described by regional boundaries (e.g. "Flora of Northern Europe" or "Flora of the Southeastern United States"), then place it only in those regional geography categories and exclude it from child categories of those". So in this case Category:Trees of Indo-China is such a regional category, X. xylocarpa being a tree of Indo-China (and India). Declangi (talk) 19:34, 21 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry if I seem pedantic, but isn't "flora" the parent of "trees"? I would be OK with Category:Flora of Indo-China I suppose ... Roy Bateman (talk) 15:49, 22 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]
These categories are a mix of what the plant is and where it is native to. For what it is, it's best to be specific as possible, so Tree is more specific than Flora. For distribution, the categories should indicate the native range, but using regional or continental categories for plants with a wide distribution. This article says "This tree is found in South and Southeast Asia", therefore Category:Trees of India and Category:Trees of Indo-China works best. If a plant is native to most countries in Africa, we would use an Africa category rather than dozens of country categories. It's really a case of what fits best for the article and avoiding WP:OVERCAT. The above category scheme, WP:PLANTS/WGSRPD, has been worked on extensively by editors at WP:PLANTS and represents current best practice. The parallel plant hierarchies like "Trees of", "Orchids of", "Grasses of", "Endemic flora of" etc. should also follow the same geographic scheme. These more specific hierarchies have the effect of mitigating very large individual categories. See Category:Flora of China for an example of what is still a very large category, but one that would be even larger without its hierarchy. Declangi (talk) 21:30, 22 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]
"WP:PLANTS/WGSRPD, has been worked on extensively by editors ..." - which appears to exclusively use the term "Flora ...". Incidentally, I set up the page List of trees of Cambodia as a page rather than a category (since there appeared to be very little PD info. on this) - what do you think? One of the problems we have here in the jungle is deciding "what constitutes a tree?": with phenomena such as mature stranglers and partially self-supporting lianas. Roy Bateman (talk) 04:44, 23 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Your List of trees of Cambodia is a great idea and thanks for your considerable effort that went into creating it. Such list articles serve a very useful purpose of collecting information that is hard to get at by other means. A particular advantage is being able to list species (red-linked) that do not yet have an article and that hopefully would encourage interested editors to create something or translate from an other-language Wikipedia. By the way, I took the liberty of adding a couple of list categories to your article, another way for those interested to find your article. Speaking of "tree-ness", when categorising I tend to go with the description from the reference I'm using. So if the reference says "grows as a shrub or small tree" then that would go in a "Flora of" category. But "grows as a tree 15–30m tall" would go in a "Trees of" category. If in doubt, "Flora of" is just fine, lianas seem like such a case. Declangi (talk) 08:41, 23 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

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A page you started (Tân Phú (thị trấn in Đồng Nai)) has been reviewed!

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Nicnote • ask me a question • contributions 15:48, 14 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Restoring Talk page text

Please stop reverting LittleJerry's removal of your comments from their Talk page. Editors are permitted to remove your comments and any other content from their own Talk pages, and if and when they do, you are not to restore them. See WP:OWNTALK. General Ization Talk 22:38, 19 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]

My objective was to post explanation of a {uw-3rr} there - do I need to formally complain? Roy Bateman (talk) 22:41, 19 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Please see my answer on my Talk page, where you also posted this question. General Ization Talk 23:57, 19 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Autopatrolled granted

Hi Roy Bateman, I just wanted to let you know that I have added the "autopatrolled" permission to your account, as you have created numerous, valid articles. This feature will have no effect on your editing, and is simply intended to reduce the workload on new page patrollers. For more information on the patroller right, see Wikipedia:Autopatrolled. Feel free to leave me a message if you have any questions. Happy editing! -- There'sNoTime (to explain) 10:09, 26 June 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Roy; I've no strong opinion on the spelling issue, but please do not perform cut-and-paste moves. If the article is in the wrong place, use the move function. This isn't a particularly egregious case, but, in other instances, it might be. Nonetheless, I'll perform a history merge. Josh Milburn (talk) 12:40, 11 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks Josh - Apologies for using the wrong procedure - 'move' function now noted. Q. asymmetrica is the correct spelling - checked on 2 data-bases. Quercus asymetrica was actually a bit of an orphan - I came across it by chance, linked it correctly with the Cyclobalanopsis sub-genus and tried to preserve all the original information on the new page: together with additional information. Roy Bateman (talk) 13:35, 11 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Mea culpa - I did the same with Q. camusiae (which was a synonym) - thanks User:Plantdrew for sorting out that one. Roy Bateman (talk) 13:58, 11 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]
That looks more like a merge than a copy-paste move, but we could merge histories to be on the safe side, perhaps. I saw that I'd created the page at Quercus asymetrica; judging from "what links here", I will have done that to fill a redlink in Phellinus ellipsoideus (I'm generally more interested in fungi than trees). I don't know whether that was my mistake or whether I was following a source with a misspelling; either way, I'm glad it's sorted now! Josh Milburn (talk) 15:14, 11 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Changing rainforest to tropical forest

I notice that youve been systematically going through Wikipedai articles, changing every instance of the usage of rainforest or tropical rainforest to either tropical forest or true rainforest. Could you please stop. You have done this in many instances, eg Jungle and Daintree National Park, where it directly contradicts the references given for the statement. You simply can not change well referenced statments on Wikipedia. If it is supported by a reliable source, the stament has to remain. Even in cases where it doesn't directly contradict the references, in all cases doing do is corrupting the meaning of other editors. The term rainforest is well understood and commonly used by both laypeople and us ecologists. It has a specific meaning. Tropical forest has a different and less well defined meeaning. The terms are not interchangeable, yet you insist on using the interchanagably. If you think that rainforest may be the wrong term to use, and it isn't supported by the references, then by all means discuss with other editors your reasons for wanting to change. But you can not simply exchange rainforest for tropical rainforest. That likely will totally change the meaning of the text. A tropical rainforest is a specific type of non-sclerophyll, broadleaf, wet forest. In contrast tropical forest, by most definitions, encompasses dry sclerophyll forests, such as the brigalow, cypress and ecalypt forests of Australia, in addition to monsoon forests and often even savannas. As a result when you change an article so that rainforest becomes tropical forest, you are reducing clarity and accuracy. And yes, I notice that tropical forest redirects to tropical moist forest. This is something that needs to be corrected, but does not make what you are doing any more valid. The same applies to your usage of "true rainforest". Ther is no such thing as true rainforest. There are literally hundreds of vegetation classification schemes used thoughout the world, most with there own definition of rainforest. The "dry rainforest" vegetation type favoured by Australian ecologists or the "Pacific Northwest rainforest" favoured by American foresters or the "equatorial rainforest" favoured Indian vegetation scientists are every bit as much "true" rainforests as anything else. I get the impression that you think that this Global 200 scheme is the only valid scheme for classifying vegetation. It is in fact just a list of high conservation priority regions. Its not a comprehensive list of biomes, nor did the authors intend it to be. You will find there are a great many vegetation types that don't fit anywhere in that scheme. Even if it were comprehensive, that would not make it more valid then the systems used by other institutions around the world. So would you please refrain from changing every instance of the use of rainforest to some other term. Thank youMark Marathon (talk) 07:54, 13 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]

No changes have been (or ever will be) made to articles that refer to sites in the true tropical rainforest climate zone, but it seems to me that many of the "rainforests" are actually "seasonal tropical forests" (for example here in Vietnam where I work): the latter are very similar to the original "jungles" of India (look-up the etymology of that word). There is a substantial body of scientific literature that contrasts the ecology of seasonal and true rainforests: which usually do not occur more than 10 deg. N and S of the equator. This is also important because it is also perhaps the zone of greatest biological diversity, with many species yet to be discovered. I am well aware that Daintree NP is referred-to as a "rainforest", but (dare I say) it seems to me that this is a misnomer. I would have thought it was a classic monsoon forest on the coast (with a strong dry season), gradually turning into more savanah-type climates inland. "Dry rainforest" almost seems like an oxymoron surely! I would dearly like to visit Daintree rainforest (for that is its name!) someday - and I did check on the climate patterns before making the change you refer-to. The fact that there are several eco-zone classifications makes it all rather confusing but I don't think we should get too hung-up on names: the important thing is to appreciate the diversity. I liked "tropical forest" because it actually forwards to Tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests - which is rather a mouthful, but I think the page nicely explains, distinguishes and forwards to the various ecosystems (BTW I am NOT a great fan of and the Global 200 scheme, but understand it is widely-used). Does this make sense to you? Roy Bateman (talk) 12:30, 13 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Where to start:


1) We are not discussing any “true tropical rainforest climate zone”, nor are the articles. The articles are discussing rainforests, regardless of which climatic zone they are in.

2) There is no “true tropical rainforest climate zone”. You have linked to one scheme, it isn’t the “true”, it’s simply one example.

3) A forest doesn’t cease to be a rainforest just because it falls outside of some climate scheme, any more than a forest becomes a rainforest simply because it falls within a rainforest climate zone. There are savannas and alpine steppe in rainforest climatic zones, just as there are rainforests in savanna or alpine climatic zones. Climatic zones, especially coarse ones such as Koppen, are blunt instruments at best.

4) You seem to think that a community must be either "rainforest" or "seasonal tropical forests". That’s simply untrue. There are literally hundreds of classification schemes and any community will inevitably fall into several of them. So your communities "are" rainforests and they "are" seasonal tropical forests, both at the same time under different scheme. It’s not a dichotomy. Kew Gardens, Nature and the Cambodian Journal of Natural History and every other major Journal in the world are quite content that the wet forests of Vietnam are rainforests. Whether they are seasonal tropical forests under some other scheme doesn’t change the fact that they are rainforests under schemes that the editors of Nature and botanists at Kew are quite comfortable with.

5) There is no such thing as a “true” rainforest. If the botanists at Kew and the editors at Nature think it’s a rainforest, it’s a rainforest as far as the world of science is concerned. Some authors may well prefer other schemes that make some other distinction. That doesn’t make the botanists at the world’s premier herbaria or the editors of the world’s most prestigious journals "wrong". What they say is “true”. That doesn’t mean that your preferred scheme is not also “true”. Once again, it’s not a dichotomy. But it does make any claims that these rainforests are not “true” somewhat unsustainable when the folks at Kew and Nature say otherwise


6) If rainforests do not occur more than 10 deg. N and S of the equator then you had better tell the people at the Royal Society of new Zealand, Journal of Zoology, Journal of Biogeography, Institute of British Geographers and Nature Conservation. Because they are all quite happy that they exist in New Zealand. Ditto for the Pacific Northwest of North Am, where, once again, the good folks at both Kew and Nature think there are rainforests.


7) You think that the Daintree Rainforest is a misnomer. Firstly Wikipedia policies don’t much care what editors think on issues of fact. If the reliable references label it a rainforest then that’s what goes in the article. Changing the article to contradict those references is vandalism, and will be reported as such if it keeps happening. The references provided said it is the oldest rainforest in the world. That’s what the article must say. You can not change it to “tropical forest” because the references do not say it’s the oldest tropical forest. And secondly, when the editors at Biological Conservation, Nature, Forest Ecology and Management, Austral Ecology and the scientists at Kew, CSIRO and the ANBG all say that the Daintree is tropical rainforest, you are on pretty shaky ground gainsaying them. When every scientific organisation in the world disagrees with you, that might be the time to reconsider your position.

8) You would have thought it was a classic monsoon forest on the coast (with a strong dry season), gradually turning into more savanah-type climates inland. You would have been simply wrong. Failure to do the research is not grounds for changing articles to misrepresent the sources on Wikipedia. I might also add that it’s not acceptable in real life science either. Reviewers and editors don’t; like people who misrepresent their sources any more than they like people who don’t do basic research, like looking at the Queensland Herbariums veg maps.

9) "Dry rainforest" may seems like an oxymoron to you, but the folks at Australian Herbaria, CSIRO, Austral Ecology and every Department of Environment and Forestry in Australia disagree with you.

10) You checked on the climate patterns before making the changes, yet you didn’t notice that the rainfall for Daintree is considerably higher in every month than, say, Manaus, in the heart of the Amazon? Do you perhaps think that the Amazon is also not a “True Rainforest”? Or are there some other figures that you are talking about? I can't think what, since soil moisture, canopy density, tree height and diversity figures all show the sme thing. You don't get 40 metre tall trees in classic monsoon forest.

Anyway, the important thing is that you please stop doing this. If a reliable source supports a statement in an article, you can’t just change the wording of the article so it says something else. That’s vandalism..Mark Marathon (talk) 04:02, 14 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Oh please - not the V word! (kindly look-up what vandalism in WP means, before making accusations) - I note that you have a history of discourtesy in WP, several complaints about edit warring and a temporary ban in 2014; therefore I do not wish to spend much longer on this. Just to clarify my views:
  • If I have substantially changed any statement so that it becomes inconsistent with the references, then it is an oversight on my part, for which I apologise.
  • However, it seems to me that much of this is a matter of semantics, over which there are clearly different opinions (just as there are various systems classifying the World biomes). Debate over these matters will go on interminably I suspect, and I for one don't wished to get bogged-down with this.
  • There are of course also temperate rainforests (as in New Zealand), but many of the world's forests are subject to seasonality, which has a very significant influence on the flora and fauna present; this is the literature to which I refer. Therefore IMHO not to consider climate would be a big mistake and the Koppen classification seems to me to be a useful descriptive tool: it is indeed a "blunt instrument", but I never suggested it should be used on its own. Do you have a problem with this?
  • Your point 6 seems obtuse - that is "tropical rainforest". The notion I wished to make (possibly not very well) is that as you move to other latitudes and climate zones there are of course ecotones, which can make characterisation of a given area somewhat problematic. You effectively say this in #4 – I don't understand why you imagine I would think otherwise.
    • The point of using tropical forest is indeed that it is generic, thus mitigating some of these issues. I see that you have taken the trouble of changing this from a redirect to an explanatory page … I would be very pleased to support you with this (and will oppose speedy deletion), but only on the basis of courteous debate on how to navigate this 'lexicological minefield' (apparently).
    • You quote various institutions, but I see considerable inconsistency in the scientific literature. For example "seasonal tropical forest" is regularly used by Smithsonian Institution people to describe the forest in Barro Colorado Island. Personally, I like this term – it most usefully encompasses "monsoon forest", "mixed tropical forest" and sometimes even "rainforest" which are widely, but sometimes carelessly, used in Thailand and here in Vietnam.
  • I therefore have every intention of continuing to use the term "tropical forest" myself. I find it especially useful for describing the habitat of species such as Tetrameles nudiflora that range from southern China (subtropical) via southern Vietnam (seasonal TF) through to Malesia (true rainforest) and down to Queensland (whatever terms you wish to use!). I respectfully suggest it might also be useful in Queensland, which is not strictly in the Af zone …
Just to be totally clear, and I hope allay your fears: "Daintree rainforest" is the name of the place and neither I nor anyone else would or should wish to change this. That need not hinder accurate description and debate about what influences and actually occurs in this and adjacent places – isn't that what scientists do? I suggest that it would be better to continue this discussion on the tropical forest talk page, which (with the caveat above) I will support.Roy Bateman (talk) 08:17, 14 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]
I notice that you are once again engaging in this behaviour, altering the wording and misrepresenting the sources on numerous articles, including jungle. i will revert your edits yet aga8in. Please do not engage in this behaviour again without discussing on the talk page and gaining consensus. Thank you.Mark Marathon (talk) 06:22, 20 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Caelifera

The consensus was that grasshopper and Caelifera should be the considered the same. Either let this go or contact more people from WikiProject Insects for more opinions for a new consensus before you make these changes. If you revert my redirect before then, I will report you. LittleJerry (talk) 03:31, 25 July 2017 (UTC) "Grasshopper" and Caelifera are not the same: if you pretend otherwise, I would question a lot of your editing here. I have and will continue reverting until you can prove to me that a pygmy mole cricket is a grasshopper. Suggest you continue this discussion on the Caelifera or grasshopper talk page. Roy Bateman (talk) 04:34, 25 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]

I reported you to Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents. LittleJerry (talk) 21:11, 25 July 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Edit warring at Caelifera

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Taxonomy templates, etc.

Hi, only in exceptional circumstances are taxonomy templates (i.e. those of the form "Template:Taxonomy/TAXON") needed for species. You use {{Speciesbox}} in the article and it picks up the taxonomy from the taxonomy template for the genus.

The system is described in full at WP:Autotaxobox system. I'm always willing to help with automated taxoboxes. Peter coxhead (talk) 11:11, 21 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]

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Done: actually need to change title of Lesina (grasshopper) to Lesina (insect). Roy Bateman (talk) 02:49, 19 June 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Polyporales

This deleted user talk thread may interest you. Plus it has been noted recently at Wikipedia_talk:Automated_taxobox_system#2_July_2018_usage_statistics_update that there are some resistant parties in WP Fungi against the auto taxobox system. seems like the pro-auto folks might need to be more organized to get this through.

Why deleted I wonder? I will add my 2 pennyworth ... Roy Bateman (talk) 04:11, 7 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]

I have unreviewed a page you curated

Hi, I'm Flixtey. I wanted to let you know that I saw the page you reviewed, Capparis micrantha, and have un-reviewed it again. If you have any questions, please ask them on my talk page. Thank you.

Flixtey (talk) 17:14, 23 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Hello Flixtey I have actually been writing Capparis: there was a small problem here because the international databases appear to completely disagree on distribution!! Brgds Roy Bateman (talk) 17:19, 23 September 2018 (UTC)[reply]

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well, yeah, but …

Talk:Grasshopper#Taxonomy, halfway through reading this section I am prompted to thank you for raising some points that seem forever unheard, a virtual run across the room to shake your hand. The thing I keep thinking in my own attempts to convey my concerns is the pov I am addressing is based fallacious conclusions drawn from licensed premises, although logic is not strong subject with me. Regards, cygnis insignis 11:35, 21 November 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Hello @Cygnis insignis: - I have just re-visited that page - yes indeed, some opinionated people spoiling what would otherwise be a good page (and wasting a lot of time). I will make one more attempt to fix it.Roy Bateman (talk) 08:11, 18 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
A perplexing situation, although I may be able unpuzzle part of this. You might have noticed Template:Insects in culture at the bottom of the page, note also the edit history of that page. Cobbling together content to fit a "traditional" model is the aim, not building content from verifiable and reliable sources; there is no consensus for that approach and this is operating "in parallel" to proper content. This is not restricted to entomology, the same hacking and forking formula is applied to a range of organisms; the facts have to be mangled or invented to suit the title of another article in the series Critters in Culture. cygnis insignis 22:16, 18 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Hello again @Cygnis insignis: - I wonder if you have any views on Talk:Cricket (insect)#Requested move 29 July 2019. Brgds Roy Bateman (talk) 03:48, 30 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I regret responding, these matters are decided but not resolved by the otherwise disinterested. Forking might be the only way to make things work, but moving the content that defines the article with verifiable concepts leaves a disambiguation page (not a "good article"). The is the situation with 'elephant' articles, a lot of duplication and confusion to suit the familiar title. The position in similar discussions has been there must be an article named [word i hav heard b4]. cygnis insignis 06:17, 30 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]
OK - thanks cygnis - will add a note on forking - now propose only minor changes to 'cricket' itself. Roy Bateman (talk) 12:42, 30 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]
The user @Plantdrew: has very clear rationales that demonstrate policy demolishes a "cargo cult" approach to article titles on animals. cygnis insignis 14:00, 30 July 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Removal of stub templates

Hi Roy, can you please reconsider the continuous removal of stub templates on stub articles?[1][2][3][4][5] The articles need to be expanded to meet the guidelines for a "start" class encyclopedia article per the site-wide and project-specific assessment guidelines before the stub template is removed. Thanks, —Hyperik talk 01:40, 28 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

I'm sorry @Hyperik: (whoever you are), but you and I will have to 'agree to disagree' on precisely where this boundary lies – and the more I work on pages, the more I think injudiciously applied stub labels are not fit for purpose. Wikipedia is littered with (other) pages that are clearly 'C' class or higher, but still supposedly "stubs". The next time I find one, I will try to remember to draw your attention to it rather than editing myself. I won't repeat what I have written before, but if they are to have any role, I think stub labels should be 'probationary' in nature and removed once a page has been 'curated'. Stubs "Provide very little meaningful content; may be little more than a dictionary definition": I merely suggest that genus pages containing (i) a complete (checked) list of species and higher taxonomic links (ii) a simple definition with common names and/or geographical information, and (iii) useful links to other sources of information are (sometimes much) more than this. I have suggested 'list' class for genera, but you don't seem to like that either. "Stubs" are typically written by people in a hurry or by robots. Occasionally, they are plainly erroneous: a recent example was Dolichopodainae – which we edited (again, thank you for your help) - so move-on and label as 'job done'. Incidentally, wouldn't it be useful to investigate how a 'systemic' error like this happened in the first place – perhaps here?
If you really must stick your stub logos on articles, why not Morabinae (today's discovery - a subfamily!!) and all the pages that have yet to be converted to the automatic taxobox system … I bet there are thousands out there … Much better still, curate the pages (as much as you can in a reasonable time), and upgrade them to 'start', to indicate the job has been done. I respectfully suggest there are more useful things to be doing: for example, I would greatly value your views on how to handle the taxa between Plecoptera and allied orders to Polyneoptera, which you have taken an interest-in. Brgds Roy Bateman (talk) 05:47, 28 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The inclusion of Euhadenoceus and Hadenoceus in Dolichopodaeinae was not erroneous. The bot/bot operator provided several sources for the taxonomic placement, e.g. [6], see also [7] (syn. Dolichopodinae).
You don't need to "draw my attention" to a C class article marked as a stub. De-stubbing, both through expansion or just reassessment, is a common task of mine.
I have not seen any consensus at any of the WikiProject discussions, or in the assessments made by numerous other active users, that a single sentence and a list of species is a "start". These are encyclopedia articles, not simply taxonomic database entries. Many of the articles you have been marking as start still need significant curation (old species lists from COL, incorrect author names, outdated and incomplete taxonomy, few references, formatted poorly per MOS, links to content unrelated to the subject, no basic description, no English common name when available, no photos, etc.). Stub templates indicate to others, who are in the mood to expand articles, that there is work to be done to expand an encyclopedia article (see WP:WIP, no "job done" here). It helps distinguish between articles that happen to have a lot of text, such as a long list of species, and those that have a lot of prose. It makes it more difficult to help expand the encyclopedia when you remove stub templates and make incorrect project assessments. —Hyperik talk 15:46, 28 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
@Hyperik: - I think you still miss my point and you are actually being inconsistent: you made some useful edits to Dolichopoda to "bring it up to start class" (thank you again), but did something similar to Sanaa (insect) and downgraded it to a stub – Why? You rightly point out that the length of genus articles is related to the number of species (hence my suggestion of list class), but I just don't understand your eagerness to downgrade the work and assessments of others, when there are so many 'obvious' stubs out there. Before I move-on from the Meconematinae (for the time being), Amyttacta is a good example of a stub, even though I have sorted-out the species lists. These categorisations are just opinions, and I think that the stub-start boundary is more about rigour (or rigor if you prefer): quality, notability and integration into the 'WP taxonomic system'. Quantity comes more at the start-C boundary (and please re-read the comments of others on this before using the 'consensus' word). Where is your consensus? Presence of photos (always good) is surely more critical to start-C and I am not sure where we are likely to find English names for Vietnamese tropical forest bush crickets!! – I can and do add VN names for plants though (checked from 2 sources where possible). We can both be selective in our interpretation of guidelines: is there any reason why the phrase about stub articles risk of "being dropped from being an article altogether" shouldn't mean exactly what it says?

'Consensus' can also be a weasel term of course - but I suspect (hope) we have a similar approach to databases. I quite agree about the limitations of CoL: which in the case of Orthoptera is often taking its information from OSF (as of 2011/12). I think we should ask ourselves how truly independent databases are to one another, but one of the strengths of WP is its ability to provide easy linkage to the relevant ones: then the reader can judge perhaps. It is a pity that you have been removing CoL references: surely they might be updated at some point – or do you know something about this? A number of entomology pages seem to rely heavily on the Bug Guide: an excellent site for what it is, but predominantly about N. American insects. I also suspect it is the main source of the Euhadenoceus & Hadenoceus discrepancy – it is erroneous, because OSF says so ;) I suppose I could stick 'stub' over the pages thus generated, but have better things to do.

We actually now rely heavily on OSF – effectively a single source and thus a matter of concern – nevertheless, by far the best global, scientific consensus available for this order (also the opinion of a senior BMNH scientist). One of my points here is that bot-generated pages must always be stubs – to be cross-checked by a human being – so how to distinguish them if they become increasingly created? I think they are a good thing and the pages generated by Sv & NL:WP, in the former case taking data from CoL, have done us an enormous service, but as always, how best to improve on them? Roy Bateman (talk) 04:57, 29 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Dolichopoda and Sanaa: one has multiple sentences from several references discussing morphology, diversity, taxonomy, and distribution among members, while the other briefly mentions only distribution.
"I am not sure where we are likely to find English names for Vietnamese tropical forest bush crickets" I said "when available".
"Where is your consensus?" The listed assessment guidelines in numerous WikiProjects (many of which have gone 10+ years without major changes), along with the listed examples alongside the assessment descriptions, and the thousands of ratings I have seen made by long-experienced Wikipedia editors/tree of life project members like Plantdrew or Nessie on your articles and other users' similar articles (all stubs). That is paired with "crickets", as far as agreement goes, on your suggestions for assessment changes on the WikiProjects. If you can point me to some discussion elsewhere I'm happy to read up on it and weigh in. I see no difference between poorly-curated human-made articles and poorly-curated bot-made articles. Helpfully, the latter are usually easily findable with categories and searching bot contributions. If you want to create a new type of assessment, i.e. something running alongside the stub-start-c+ system, related to your issues of bot vs. human, you could propose that I suppose.
You seem stuck on the idea that taxon articles are going to suddenly be deleted if they are tagged as stubs. I can assure you, again, that they won't be. All accepted taxa are notable articles and will not be deleted/"dropped". Again, that text comes from the generic assessment guidelines, which is copied on several WikiProjects. It's relevant to portions of WikiProjects, like marginal scientists/researchers who may not meet guidelines for notability, but it's not relevant to accepted taxa. "Notability" is never a reason to remove a stub template from a taxon article. The article contents need to be expanded before it is removed.
But anyway, rather than copy/paste taxonomically outdated articles from a different language and slightly different code from a different Wikipedia, why not just recreate them in with the latest information? It's pretty quick... and just throw in a sentence or two about its morphology or ecology. —Hyperik talk 15:54, 29 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

@Hyperik: – Let us end the year by trying to identify some points of agreement - and since you mentioned them, I would prefer to read the views of @Plantdrew: and @NessieVL: directly, if they have time. It seems to me that:

  • The 'rise of the bots' is a major reason why I think this issue matters (sorry if I didn't make this clear before). Another reason is the number of pages, possibly of poor quality or containing outdated taxonomy, that have yet to be entered into the automatic taxobox system, etc: so it is not just bot vs. human. Personally, I just don't see why we can't just make relatively minor tweaks/clarifications to stub-start-C+, rather than having to develop yet another system (and here I must confess to not understanding all the existing intricacies of WP!). If the guidelines have been there for 10+ years – and a lot has changed in that time – isn't a review in order?
  • We have agreed, perhaps with some exasperation :), that there is 'always something else to add' … I take your points about including brief descriptions, etc., but I hope you appreciate that this is usually much easier to do for European, N. American (and possibly Australian) genera and spp. than those from elsewhere. If I have understood @Peter coxhead:'s view correctly, you may have actually upgraded Dolichopoda to a C-class.
  • We absolutely can agree that simply translating "taxonomically outdated articles from a different language" is less than wonderful. I do not to do this and try to 'add value', however small: most importantly by checking existing sources (e.g. CoL from Sv:WP) and adding more if possible - most quickly and simply by using the very wonderful 'taxonbar'.
  • I am sure we all agree that adding (good, correctly identified!) images to pages is very useful. This is one of the objectives I am trying to work towards in writing pages about Vietnamese genera and spp. Today I am upgrading Ancistrocladus tectorius (from stub to start, after nearly 8 years), having managed to take a picture of a plant flowering here in 2018 – this is quite a rare event, I gather.

May I take this opportunity to wish you all a very happy New Year and thank you for all your edits and suggestions. Roy Bateman (talk) 10:43, 30 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Roy—If you're interested in finding orthopteran articles that have taxoboxes that need conversion, you can use a Petscan query like this one. At the time of this writing, looks like there are 559 pages categorized under Category:Orthoptera that have a manual taxobox and 1279 that have an automatic taxobox or speciesbox. —Hyperik talk 16:37, 30 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
FYI, mainly because I've done similar Petscan queries, the taxobox templates are: {{Taxobox}}, {{Speciesbox}}, {{Infraspeciesbox}}, {{Automatic taxobox}}, {{Subspeciesbox}}, {{Ichnobox}}, {{Oobox}}, {{Virusbox}}, {{Hybridbox}}, and {{Paraphyletic group}}. The first and last are 'manual' and the rest are automatic, but there is no auto version for paraphyletic groups, so that doesn't need conversion. There's also {{Missing-taxobox}} but that's not placed on talk pages, but the article. --Nessie (talk) 20:40, 30 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
Several points:
  • However carefully you try to define the assessment classes, there will always be subjective judgement involved.
  • For me, typically a C class plant or spider article (which is where I mostly work) will have a taxobox (of course) and at least Description, Taxonomy, and Distribution and habitat sections, with the Taxonomy section including a list of subtaxa where appropriate. References, categories and now the taxonbar will be present and correct. For many more obscure taxa, this is all that can be expected, so if these sections are 'well done', a higher class than C may be appropriate. For a well known organism, with human uses, more would be expected.
  • A start article should have at least one of the 'descriptive' sections, not just a short lead and/or a list of subtaxa, which is all that a stub has.
I would rate Dolichopoda as less than C class, because there's neither a Description nor Distribution and habitat section. There is also some taxonomy missing – a verbal statement of who erected the genus and when, and why it was separated from Gryllus. I wouldn't necessarily expect all of these for C, but some should be there in my view. Peter coxhead (talk) 12:33, 30 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]
  • I don't have much to add. I will say that a complete list of subtaxa does not really change the quality level: Many of what I consider stubs have them and little else. They are important for the article, but I think prose is what should be considered for quality, kind of like with DYKs. Likewise, taxoboxes should not be a bar for quality, as all articles on taxa should have them, and usually Category:Missing taxobox is empty or nearly so.
My line between stub and start is pretty much about the prose. Stubs are just a sentence or two like 'x is a species of y that is a plant pathogen of z.' Starts, to me, atleast have an interesting hook that a reader would be curious about: 'It is the onky plant pollinated by a cricket' or 'It is used as a spice in South America.' You know, something that differentiates that species of x from all the other species of x. For C I look to see that it has actual sections. --Nessie (talk) 14:30, 30 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Hi again, drive by comment, forgot to take you off my watchlist and I'm always interested in what these editors have to say. I occasionally remove stub templates, but don't give ratings much more thought; I feel it is more appropriate letting others evaluate my content. The general advice is a good reminder of content to add, which is of course the priority, but the last comment about prose contains a key point: the article should start to integrate itself into the encyclopaedia. cygnis insignis 17:41, 30 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

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Speedy deletion nomination of Template:Taxonomy/Dracontomelon schmidii

A tag has been placed on Template:Taxonomy/Dracontomelon schmidii requesting that it be speedily deleted from Wikipedia. This has been done under section T3 of the criteria for speedy deletion because it is an unused duplicate of another template, or a hard-coded instance of another template. After seven days, if it is still unused and the speedy deletion tag has not been removed, the template will be deleted.

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Hello Roy, this notice is one of several species templates that you had created last year. The template is not currently in use because it duplicates the function of the existing taxonomy template at the genus level. This series of deletion requests was prompted by this discussion on the WT:Automated_taxobox_system page. If you have any questions on this, ask away. Alternatively, if you check (on PetScan) that the templates are not in use, you could blank them yourself and replace the content with a CSD:G7 template. 'Cheers Loopy30 (talk) 23:15, 9 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Hello Roy, as you have objected to the speedy deletion of Template:Taxonomy/Dracontomelon schmidii, could you explain your rationale on the template talk page for wishing to keep it? I have also commented there and I am not certain that you are perhaps just confusing this proposal to delete an unused and redundant template with a non-existant AfD for the species article page. Please confirm or explain as your objection for speedy deletion of the template will hold up the process and force a listing at WP:TFD. 'Cheers, Loopy30 (talk) 03:03, 12 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I deleted it today. If that's a problem, User talk:Athaenara#Taxonomy Template CSDs will remain undisturbed for at least a few months and I can be notified there. – Athaenara 19:56, 13 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Your edit

That is all right! Because this time it has not mangled the infobox. Seemed to be a problem previously, atleast on my display. Toffee Colour Cooperative (talk) 08:15, 15 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks & sorry for the confusion - never sure which bit to edit first!Roy Bateman (talk)

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Insertcleverphrasehere (or here)(click me!) 04:22, 30 January 2020 (UTC) Done Roy Bateman (talk) 04:43, 30 January 2020 (UTC)[reply]

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{{Re|Insertcleverphrasehere}} Done - more edits soon Roy Bateman (talk) 04:52, 30 January 2020 (UTC)[reply]

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Changing scientific name

Hi, if you update the scientific name in an article which has it as the title, as at Phaeanthus malabaricus, then (1) you should add a reliable secondary reference for the new name (2) the article needs to be moved to the new name. Peter coxhead (talk) 08:37, 7 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Oops - thank-you Peter - now done. I appear to have 'opened a can of worms' with my interest in species, found here in Vietnam, that have been moved from (and to) the genus Polyalthia. I will shortly start a discussion at Talk:Polyalthia and would appreciate your comments. Brgds Roy Bateman (talk) 07:21, 8 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]

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Link deliberate ==> more than one spp. Roy Bateman (talk) 14:13, 22 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]

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Reversions of established article quality classifications

If a taxon article like Agraeciini contains no other information than its descendant taxa, it's classified as a stub. The other many thousands of taxon articles that just include a list of descendants are classified as stubs, not lists. If classifying an article as "stub" is distasteful, an easy way to fix it would be to expand the article. Then it'd be a "start". —Hyperik talk 18:32, 6 June 2020 (UTC)[reply]

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Dalbergia merge proposals

Thanks for proposing the sensible set of merge proposals regarding synonyms including Dalbergia bariensis. Just a few tips about constucting the proposals (for more, see WP:MERGEPROP):

  • You only need the merge proposal on the article page, not the talk page
  • You can use the merge template to indicate a direction; for example, using template:merge to or template:merge from
  • Remember to tag the page you want to merge too, as well as the one you want to merge from
  • Merge discussions are usually, and best, started on the intended destination page.
  • If you have multiple related proposals, like those to Dalbergia oliveri, its probably most efficient to start one merge proposal, and indicate this in the templates. For example, you can use {{merge|Dalbergia bariensis|Dalbergia dongnaiensis|Dalbergia mammosa|target=Dalbergia oliveri|date=October 2020}}

I've amended the Dalbergia templates you've recently placed, but thought that it might be helpful to list the general principles here. Klbrain (talk) 08:28, 10 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Many thanks Klbrain - I need help from people who understand "WP plumbing" better than me! I have set up discussion on destination talk page and will wait 1-2 weeks before making any redirects. Roy Bateman (talk) 04:47, 11 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for being tolerant of my sometimes gnomish extremes! Klbrain (talk) 08:14, 11 October 2020 (UTC)[reply]

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Page review request

Hi Roy,

I am currently working on the Eurycnema goliath page for a university course at the University of Sydney. I saw you were an active and established member of Wikiproject insects, and I was wondering if you could have a look at the article to give me some feedback?

Thanks, --Lrak21 (talk) 00:08, 21 May 2021 (UTC)[[8]][reply]

Hello Lrak21 ... splendid stuff - many thanks for your edits - you seem to have turned the page from a 'stub' to at least C-grade (probably deserves more soon). I will make some suggestions with edits shortly: the main one will be to automate the taxobox and place synonyms there. I have started the genus page Eurycnema and note that there are 3 other spp. some Australasian. In this way, the page benefits from WPs very useful taxonomy 'backbone', and it is easy to start pages for your other, similar local species. Keep up the good work! Roy Bateman (talk) 01:52, 22 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks so much Roy, I really appreciate your feedback and input. I need to add about another 700 words to the article for my course, so I will let you know when I'm finished. Thanks again. --Lrak21 (talk) 08:30, 22 May 2021 (UTC)Lrak21[reply]

Hi Roy, I have just about finished adding my information to the article, I was wondering if you could have another look? Thanks --Lrak21 (talk) 03:04, 26 May 2021 (UTC)Lrak21[reply]
Hello Lrak21 looks very good to me - and now conforms at least to 'B class' having met all the criteria (NB it was important to convert the taxobox to a speciesbox for optimising "supporting materials where appropriate"). So we (mostly you) have taken it from a 'stub' to 'B': I think another editor should assess higher - probably deserved already. You may have had enough of this for the time being, but if you were interested in doing more, I would place a higher priority on making a start on the many genera and species - for example in the tribe Phasmatini (or Eurycnema osiris - referred-to on your page - do you know where we can obtain a photo?). I think the latter is more useful than perfecting individual pages (but that's just my opinion). Anyway well done and thanks again. Roy Bateman (talk) 04:17, 27 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]

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katydid is not uniquely American

Hi, Roy. You and I frequent the same basic pagespace so we overlap a lot on our edited articles, but I don't recall ever having a significant disagreement with you. I do, however, have to disagree with characterizing the name "katydid" as an "Americanism". Of the top 5 native English-speaking countries (as Wikipedia defines them), Australia, Canada, South Africa, and the United States all use katydid; only the UK uses bush cricket. Yes, I'm an American entomologist, but I can also look objectively at this and feel justified in pointing out that "bush cricket" is more uniquely British than "katydid" is uniquely American. I despise edit wars, but given that Wikipedia almost always treats majority opinions as having the upper hand, I maintain that the best general disambiguation for any tettigoniid page is "katydid" rather than "insect" or "genus". In this particular case (where you reverted Sanaa), this is a pseudophylline genus, which is one of the "true katydids" by common name, and at the very least all members of this subfamily (and a few others) share that common name. I feel that it's important to have consistency in article titles, and would prefer to achieve this by consensus, rather than dispute. Peace, Dyanega (talk) 22:36, 2 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Hello Dyanega: yes indeed, I am sure neither you nor I would would want to make a big issue out of this and am also sure we agree on most things ... which is partly why I was quite surprised that you had gone to the trouble of making the page move! What is done is done and thank you for reverting: here are some of my thoughts on the issues raised:
* You are better placed than me to comment on the name "katydid", but I always thought it was onomatopoeic, based on the N. American genus Pterophylla - I also understand the problem Americans have with using "bush cricket".
* FYI the Aus/NZ entomologists that I know be aware-of and may use either - perhaps depends on the text book or university they were brought-up on! S. Africans often use quite specific local names for some of their wonderful creatures. I also note that you are obliged to put "true katydids" for members of the Pseudophyllinae - is that all Americans or just the entomologists I wonder :)?
* Scientific names are there for a reason and WP rightly retains Tettigoniidae (itself probably onomatopoeic): my personal heresy is that we try to substitute English names far too much (e.g. why are the Diptera dumbed-down to "flies"?)
* We absolutely agree on our dislike of "genus" for dab. and I have supported your standardisation to "planthopper"; however I have been influenced by other editors who have widely used higher taxa such as "annelid", "mollusc" and have tended to use "insect" by default.
best regards Roy Bateman (talk) 14:16, 4 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

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Fulgoridae and FLOW

Hi, Roy. There are, every now and then, some issues with outdated higher-level taxonomy in FLOW, and if you work through it and systematically change everything in Wikipedia to correspond to FLOW, then some of those changes might cause problems. If you want to get some details, feel free to contact me via my institutional e-mail, I'll be happy to help. Peace. Dyanega (talk) Dyanega (talk) 18:55, 3 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks Dyanega - I quite agree with your reservations about using just one data-base - and recently quoted both FLOW and BioLib for a page on Delphacini (fairly good agreement). The problem is that I feel that En:WP has "neglected" a large number of significant (even European) genera, and it can be difficult to obtain information: especially for African and Asian organisms. Others may use GBIF and the Catalogue of Life, but these are often second-hand, from FLOW or the Species Files, so I tend to treat them (and POWO for plants) as relatively authoratative. Corrections and additional material can always be added later surely? I also continue to be surprised how many "orphan" species pages turn up! Brgds. Roy Bateman (talk) 13:36, 24 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

"currently"

Hi, re this edit, we're not supposed to use "currently", as per MOS:CURRENT. I usually put "{{As of|YEAR|MONTH}}" – see WP:ASOF. After this the past tense is used because it will be read in the future as well. Peter coxhead (talk) 10:41, 22 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks Peter noted - esp. important to date certain insect lists I think! Roy Bateman (talk) 11:21, 22 March 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Disambiguation link notification for April 6

An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Pentatominae, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Indrapura.

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This user's unblock request has been reviewed by an administrator, who declined the request. Other administrators may also review this block, but should not override the decision without good reason (see the blocking policy).

Roy Bateman (block log • active blocks • global blocks • contribsdeleted contribs • filter log • creation logchange block settings • unblock • checkuser (log))


Request reason:

I have recently moved to Vietnam and find IP addresses here blocked for editing on En:WP (not Nl:WP) - is there a reason for this please? Roy Bateman (talk) 08:19, 7 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Decline reason:

It's difficult to look into this without knowing the IP address involved. If you don't wish to post it publicly, you may use WP:UTRS to provide it privately. 331dot (talk) 08:47, 7 August 2023 (UTC)[reply]


If you want to make any further unblock requests, please read the guide to appealing blocks first, then use the {{unblock}} template again. If you make too many unconvincing or disruptive unblock requests, you may be prevented from editing this page until your block has expired. Do not remove this unblock review while you are blocked.

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Disambiguation link notification for October 26

An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Blaberidae, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Australian wood cockroach.

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There is a requested move discussion at Talk:Trema micrantha#Requested move 1 November 2023 that may be of interest to you. Abductive (reasoning) 08:17, 3 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Done - I agree that naming should be kept up-to-date: and POWO/IPNI and GBIF are consistent on this. Roy Bateman (talk) 15:33, 3 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

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Your edit on Hymenosporum

Please read the references for the habitat of this species. They all refer to rainforest, nothing else. If you have a source for other habitats please provide it as a reference in the article. Cheers  Junglenut |Talk  12:51, 6 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Sorry, rainforest and wet sclerophyll forest.  Junglenut |Talk  12:52, 6 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you - in which case, please say so: IMO the word "rainforest" is often greatly overused (which devalues its meaning). Roy Bateman (talk) 02:52, 7 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Disambiguation link notification for January 30

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Disambiguation link notification for February 15

An automated process has detected that when you recently edited Craspedosomatidae, you added a link pointing to the disambiguation page Prionosoma.

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For the record - that was deliberate: synonyms. Roy Bateman (talk) 02:13, 16 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
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