Dozens of bird names honoring enslavers and racists will be changed - The American Ornithological Society says it will alter the names of North American birds named after humans, starting with up to 80 of them.

By Darryl Fears
Updated November 1, 2023 at 9:52 a.m. EDT|Published November 1, 2023 at 9:00 a.m. EDT

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An Audubon shearwater, named for John James Audubon, one of America's most famous birders and an enslaver. (Hstiver/Getty Images/iStockphoto)

After two years of discussion and debate, the nation’s premiere birding organization has decided that birds should not have human names.

The American Ornithological Society announced Wednesday that it will remove names given to North American birds in honor of people and replace them with monikers that better describe their plumage and other characteristics. The group said it will prioritize birds whose names trace to enslavers, white supremacists and robbers of Indigenous graves. Among them is one of the most famous birders in U.S. history, John James Audubon.

“There is power in a name, and some English bird names have associations with the past that continue to be exclusionary and harmful today,” the society’s president, Colleen Handel, said in a statement. “We need a much more inclusive and engaging scientific process that focuses attention on the unique features and beauty of the birds themselves.”

Sometime next year, the society is expected to appoint a committee to explore up to 80 new names. The move, at an organization known for its reluctance to rename birds, was surprising even to the activists within the group who requested it after a White woman in Central Park falsely accused a Black birder of assault in 2020. In a racial reckoning that shook the field of ornithology, the activists, most of them White, argued that the names of some birds were offensive to people of color.

“We have seen a lot of changes in our world in the recent past,” Sara Morris, the society’s president-elect, said in reference to racial justice protests the followed George Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer and the Central Park incident involving birder Christian Cooper.

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Sumayyah Ali, 13, notices a woodcock flying through the trees while traveling with a group of birders at Patterson Park in October 2022 in Baltimore. Fellow birder Rohan Mattu is the first to notice where Ali is pointing. (Maansi Srivastava for The Washington Post)

Racial insensitivity in the overwhelmingly White field of ornithology and birding should be rejected, Morris said. Recent reports projected that North America has lost 3 billion birds in the last 50 years, and “we need to engage as many people as we can in the enjoyment, study and conservation of birds as we can,” said Morris. “We need to break down as many barriers to participation as we can.”

Not every birder in the 2,700-member society is expected to welcome the news. Some who’ve memorized names established for more than a century are likely to push back. “Are we expecting that people won’t agree with this decision — sure,” Morris said. “But we’re proud of this decision. As we talked to people, many of them changed their minds.”

Jordan Rutter, a birder who organized the petition with her fiancé, Gabriel Foley, said the society’s action left her speechless. “That’s everything we asked,” said Rutter, who co-founded the group Bird Names for Birds, which listed about a dozen men honored with bird names and described their racist pasts. “I never thought this would be happening. ... What an incredible moment for the birding community.”

For the time being, birders of color who spot the Townsend’s warbler and the Townsend’s solitaire might be startled by the history of its namesake, John Kirk Townsend. His journals describe his collection of skulls, stolen from the graves of Native people in the 1800s, to promote his theory that they were racially inferior.

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An adult male Townsend's warbler, named for 19th-century American ornithologist John Kirk Townsend. (Agami Photo Agency/Shutterstock / Agami Photo Agency)

In North America, where Indigenous tribes in what are now the United States and Canada encountered and named wild birds centuries before the arrival of European settlers, “White people are credited for discovering [the birds]. White people were the ones to name the birds after other White people. And White people are still the folks that are perpetuating these names,” Rutter said in a 2021 interview with The Washington Post.

At least two chapters of the National Audubon Society voted to change their names and distance themselves from the enslaver who detested abolitionists and, by his own account, once guided a family of escapees back to their enslaver. The Audubon’s shearwater and Audubon’s oriole were named to honor him.

Black birders who trace the Bachman’s sparrow and Bachman’s warbler to the man they immortalized, John Bachman, might find this passage in one of his speeches: “That the Negro will remain as he is, unless his form is changed by an amalgamation, which ... is revolting to us. That his intellect ... is greatly inferior to that of the Caucasian, and that he is, therefore ... incapable of self-government. That he is thrown to our protection. That our defense of slavery is contained within the Holy scriptures.”

Two members of Bird Names for Birds, Jess McLaughlin and Alex Holt, confirmed this history in library archives and helped bring it to the ornithological society’s attention, Rutter said. “It wasn’t, ‘Take our word for it.’ The evidence was right there.”

The society and its predecessor, the American Ornithologists’ Union, have managed a list of English-language bird names in North America since 1886. They are used by schools, government, conservationists, birders and other groups, the statement said.

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Townsend used skulls stolen from the graves of Native people to promote his theory that they were racially inferior. (Public Domain)
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Several birds are named for Alfred Russel Wallace (1823-1913), a British naturalist whose writings frequently used the n-word. (Hulton Deutsch/Corbis via Getty Images)

Erica Nol, co-chair of the society’s Ad Hoc Committee on English Bird Names, said members took the issue seriously from the day the committee was formed more than a year ago. Meeting every two weeks via Zoom, they came up with a priority list of names to consider changing.

At first, the diverse White, Black and Latino members failed to arrive at a consensus. In addition to North American birds, they mulled changing the names of South American birds but eventually decided that it was not their place.

Months later, the members came to the realization that all eponymous names were problematic. “They imply possession of a species,” Nol said. “They are overwhelmingly from a particular time and social fabric, they are almost all White men, few women, and women were almost all first names. Our main goal was to increase the birdwatching public."

The committee startled the society’s leadership with its recommendation to change all English bird names and at least two cultural names of birds that did not make sense. “The name should be descriptive of the bird,” Nol said.

Both Morris and Judith Scarl, the chief executive and executive director, agreed with Nol’s observation that the society’s leadership looked at them as though they were crazy. “There were hard questions about how we would justify this,” Nol said.

“This is a historic, momentous decision,” said Scarl. “This is the way to go. We are going to work hard to bring people along to that understanding.”

Kenn Kaufman, a society member, started birding at age 6. “I was a little kid in South Bend, Indiana, and got interested in birds because they were there and they were fascinating,” he said. “Some of these bird names I’ve been using for a half century.”

Overall, Kaufman said, “I thought it was a mess to go in and change all these names.” But he started talking with people such as Rutter and Drew Lanham, a Black ornithologist and professor at Clemson University in South Carolina. “As the conversation went on I realized they were changing my mind. It’s amazing how more information can do that,” he said.

“I’m sure there are going to be objections,” Kaufman said. “I’m sure the term ‘woke’ will be used. I still don’t know what that means. I just hope they can come around to see this from the view of groups of people who may have been marginalized in the past.”

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No, but there is another bird they're familiar with: the ceiling bird.
And dat fried yardbird, sheeiiit.

It's amazing to me such an irrelevant and useless minority has such influence on this country. They are now factually a net drain on society and contribute nothing. WTF happened between the 1920s and today is a mystery, it was never this bad back then.
 
You all thought the western cultural revolution was gonna stop just because we're entering a big recession and maybe WWIII?

Think again.
“There is power in a name, and some English bird names have associations with the past that continue to be exclusionary and harmful today
Literally shit nobody cares about, this is what happens when you got lifetime employment as an academic parasite and don't have to worry about delivering actual results or get fired and starve, like everybody else does.
a British naturalist whose writings frequently used the n-word.
They are truly grasping at straws here, just say "he's white and white=bad".

These fuckers better refuse all oncological drugs made by whites too...
 
I'm gonna call every bird I see nigger, now, just out of spite. And I don't even really like the heckin' racisms. But I have an even stronger dislike of this kind of useless pseudo-activist revisionism, and the useless cunts who peddle it.
Does anyone here know a nigger that can name a bird that isn't a robin or parrot?
Dat cracka-ass cracka Larry Bird?
 
In North America, where Indigenous tribes in what are now the United States and Canada encountered and named wild birds centuries before the arrival of European settlers, “White people are credited for discovering [the birds]. White people were the ones to name the birds after other White people. And White people are still the folks that are perpetuating these names,” Rutter said in a 2021 interview with The Washington Post.

I don't think that these settlers thought the birds miraculously appeared as soon as their white feet touched North American land. It's just that the birds had not been scientifically documented yet. Woketards always act like whites think they willed stuff into existence. Jesus Christ. The Wawa convenience store chain is literally named for the indigenous name of a fucking goose. :roll:
 
Blackbirds?! BLACKBIRDS?????
My HS has an archive of yearbooks going back to the 1920s and there is a great joke in the back:

"At a white man's funeral, they sing 'Nearer my God to Thee. What do they sing at a colored man's funeral?""
"I'll bite, what?"
"Bye Bye Blackbird"

I also like the ad from that one for a new housing development across from the school. "HIGHLY RESTRICTED, the finest place to live". You just know what that means.

Goddamn it if I don't agree, New World spades, whether they're island coons, Brazilian jigs or American niggers are just plain trouble.
 
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You know, something tells me this isn’t going to make black people give a shit about birdwatching, and it’ll drive out all the whites who took up the hobby just to get away from nigger worship(presumably every bird enthusiast other than these faggots)
It certainly drove me away. It's not even about "nigger worship" - it's about being told I'm not allowed to disagree that the names of some birds, plants, and fungi aren't big enough deals to fight with people over. I'm not allowed to say, "I don't think it matters that much if people want to call it a Wood Ear Mushroom or a Jew's Ear Mushroom" because that makes me a dirty anti-Semite or some stupid crap like that.

Apparently it's not just auties who don't have the ability to see nuance.
 
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