User talk:MPF/archive5

I hope you don't mind my stalking you.. I'm not really doing it on purpose... One of the things I like doing is adding/correcting taxoboxes and other taxonomic references. And since I generally use Recent Changes to find my articles, and you've been doing a lot of edits.... Hope ya don't mind! - UtherSRG 17:44, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
 * Taxonomic stalking, taxobox, ToL and Categories
 * Thanks - much appreciated! MPF 19:06, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)

MPF - stop by Wikipedia:WikiProject Tree of Life - we've modified the taxobox standards. - UtherSRG 23:25, 29 Feb 2004 (UTC)

Please weigh in: Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Tree_of_Life#MW_1.3_categories

As to the names Regnum, Divisio etc., I advise you to look at Taxobox components. The purpose of these messages is to allow easy translation of taxobox components for use in other Wikipedias. JoJan 05:38, 19 Jun 2004 (UTC)

What I have written is available at Talk:Fibonacci_number/Phyllotaxis; please feel free to do whatever you like with it. -- Dominus 02:25, 5 Jul 2004 (UTC)
 * Fibonacci numbers and Phyllotaxis

Thank you for the interest to the topic. Feel free to upload the maps and any image you think appropriate for the topic. The maps you refer on, are designed after Farjon. They can be enhanced with Liu who gives more detailed maps. I've also one good image from Bulgaria and will upload it soon (a very big tree from the Pirin mountains). Best wishes Orjen 22:10, July July (CEST)
 * Abies


 * Hi, couldn't manage to reply earlier! A higher resolution image of Bild:Prastara jela Orjen.jpg is available. Additionally two more images from virgin fir forests in the Balkans are Bild:Jelka Orjen 1.jpg and Bild:Pirin fir.jpg. Thanks for putting the images on wiki commons.

Best wishes Orjen 11:00, 5 August (CEST)

t.i.a., TeunSpaans 03:02, 1 August 2005 (UTC)
 * 1) Maps of Abies? where can i find them?
 * 2) Do you by any chance have more images of Abies grandis?

Please review Cyperus rotundus. Do you think it justifies a "World's worst weed" redirect? TIA, RickP 23:30, 23 December 2005 (UTC)
 * Cyperus rotundus
 * Thanks; I'll be looking forward to more feedback from you.
 * From brief look at some of the other "worst weeds" you listed it seems to me that Cyperus rotundus is significantly worse - for example, Chromolaena odorata, as a member of the Asteraceae family, is probably much more susceptible to ploughing and to herbicides; Eichhornia crassipes (water hyacinth) does not affect any land crops. Could you advise how to start a productive discussion on this topic?
 * It also looks to me like the list under weed#Plants that are often considered weeds|Plants that are often considered weeds on the Weed page is rather arbitrary. What do you think?
 * Regards, RickP 08:22, 24 December 2005 (UTC)
 * I learned a lot from your work today on the article! Thanks, RickJP 13:06, 24 August 2006 (UTC)

Hi MPF,
 * Hydrangea anomala vs. H. petiolaris

Referring to your question at da:Bruger:Sten I have the following answer:

Since you prefer to split the (former) subspecies ''H.anomala ssp. petiolaris'' off as a seperate species, I would place a link to the Danish article da:Klatre-Hortensia in your article Hydrangea petiolaris (I have already done that).

- and thank you for your interest!

--Sten 18:12, 8 March 2006 (UTC)

Hello - I have noticed that there are variations in capitalization in the names for oaks (e.g. California Scrub Oak and California black oak). Sometimes all the words are capitalized, and sometimes only the first word is capitalized. Should there be any consistency in the capitalization, especially in the names of the articles? Schzmo 00:23, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Name consistency

"y1997xf11 - it is a nice photo, but it is Araucaria angustifolia or A. bidwillii, not A. araucana!" Thanks MPF. In botany, I always did well down to Genus but never got the hang of species! Appreciate your fine eye. I'm sure a walk in the forest with you would be a most enjoyable experience. Thank you for being a part of the Wiki community. Y1997xf11
 * Araucaria Tree

The ANBG database is still down at the time I'm writing this. Because X. bracteatum occurs in Western Australia, it has an entry in florabase.calm.wa.gov.au/ Florabase, which lists it as Xerochrysum bracteata (Vent.) Tzvelev. This is authoritative. Frustratingly, Florabase does not contain name entries for higher taxa, so I googled for an genus author and came up with Xerochrysum Tzvelev. It would be worthwhile checking this once ANBG comes back up. Snottygobble 22:55, 9 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Xerochrysum
 * No worries, mate. I've had trouble with ANBG quite a few times now; I think it must be a bit unstable. Snottygobble 23:04, 9 March 2006 (UTC)

Thank you for polite correction on the misuse of inverted commas for article titles, however I'm still left with a problem. The inverted commas appear because that is the way the [elm] hybrid is written in the main Elm page. I've tried extending the double parentheses leftwards to include the generic name [Ulmus] as well, but the system won't wear it; simply reproduces the brackets on the main page. Could you provide an example of how it should be done, eg for Ulmus 'Columella' which I can then simply copy? I've accumulated a wealth of information about modern elm hybrids, which I'd like to broadcast to help overcome the suspicion with which these trees are still regarded following the poor performance of the earlier attempts at DED-resistant trees such as Dodoens etc. Regards Ptelea 11:12, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Request for help

How do I handle species names that are considered nondistinct by some authorities, but distinct by other authorities that seem equally reliable, such as the ones I listed on [Talk:Pine]? What is the most accurate source for species, and which one should be used for Wikipedia? Thanks, Schzmo 21:56, 11 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Distinct or nondistinct species
 * Hello MPF. I was thinking about Pinus reflexa. It is sometimes treated as a variety of Limber Pine Pinus flexilis var. reflexa but more often as a distinct species P. reflexa. Currently the page on P. reflexa (Southwestern White Pine) is a redirect to Limber Pine. Should P. reflexa have its own article, or just be part of the Limber Pine article since it is also treated as a variety? Not to mention all the confusion about "P. strobiformis" and "Southwestern White Pine"... Schzmo 15:11, 12 March 2006 (UTC)

I believe you're an admnistrator now? There is a probable copyright violation in the form of a letter to the editor copied from Taxon, posted by Berton in the discussion pages for Phylocode and Cladistics. MrDarwin 13:53, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Copyright violation
 * Is the text placement (a public letter) in a talk page copyright violation? Which is the legal device inside of Wikipedia that affirms this? Don't forget that: "Also, both the Berne Convention and U.S. law require that a work have some original creativity to be eligible for a copyright monopoly."Berton 16:05, 19 March 2006 (UTC)

What do you mean the measurement's not verified? If you look at the talk page, you will clearly see a link to a paper from Foresty Tasmania which states that it was measured by a certified surveyor. With a source. Did you miss that, or do you want official footnotes? cheers, pfctdayelise (translate?) 04:22, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Thorpdale, Victoria tree


 * I changed it slightly. I feel it's a bit unfair to discredit such measurements completely when they were the best at the time. pfctdayelise (translate?) 06:29, 24 March 2006 (UTC)

THanks for the note. I am looking at ways to correct this. Rich  Farmbrough 11:20 20  March 2006 (UTC).
 * Lanuage sort order
 * BTW I was going to tell you about the poll (which I recently discovered), but I see you've found it via Village Pump. If and when this gets sorted definitively we can get all articles on the same standard fairly easily.  Rich   Farmbrough 22:00 25  March 2006 (UTC).

That's a nice pic. I plan to go to the Bronx Zoo next weekend to take some pics for articles that need 'em. - UtherSRG (talk) 02:52, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
 * M. merganser

I'm not the one who added it but I'm curious as to why you keep deleting the link to the Brugmansia group. This is not a commercial link, it is a link to a hobbyist discussion group. Is there a policy that such groups aren't to be listed? MrDarwin 14:58, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Brugmansia links

Hello, I think the species name for Ichang Lemon may be wrong, as it shows up as C. grandis or C. x grandis (or even subgenus papeda). Is there any Citrus authority where you could check this? Thanks! Badagnani 15:31, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Ichang Lemon

Hi. I've created an articles for County flower and a List of county flowers of the United Kingdom. I'm sure both could be improved a lot - I'd welcome comments (or edits) from you. SP-KP 22:16, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
 * Input invited

Thanks for the reply. I take your point about combining them, however there is quite a bit more info to come for the county flower article itself, and that will probably make two pages justifiable. If you are able to let me know of any links you spot which need amending, I'd be happy to go through and fix those - I started this with a few of the more obvious ones but two pairs of eyes will pick the complete set up better than one. Cheers SP-KP 22:44, 30 March 2006 (UTC)

My first new clover of the year. I'm thinking the pics at the Wikipedia:Commons on Trifolium incarnatum (Crimson clover) might be getting confused with Trifolium pratense, Red clover, but I might be wrong. Anyway, thought I'd mention it and show off my work. --DanielCD 23:33, 1 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Crimson clover


 * Thanks for the tidying-up. My plant-info skills are still a little rusty, as I've been dormant on plant issues most of the winter ;). --DanielCD 18:04, 2 April 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for the info, I'll use the template hereafter. –Mysid 13:15, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Commons cat link

I believe the articles for California Washingtonia and Mexican Washingtonia should go under their species names, Washingtonia filifera and Washingtonia robusta, respectively, with common names redirecting to the species names. I have rarely, if ever, come across "California Washingtonia" and "Mexican Washingtonia" in discussion or in the literature; the Flora of North America does not mention these as common names (giving instead "California fan palm" and "Mexican fan palm", the names I am most accustomed to seeing). MrDarwin 13:57, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Request for page moves

Thank you! MrDarwin 16:49, 6 April 2006 (UTC)

I'm trying to help wikipedia by making it consistant. Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Tree_of_Life#Consistancy_and_algae is a discussion I started about the taxonomy of green algae and why they're grouped as plants as of right now. I figure you might be interested, since you like plants. I don't mind what you choose, but would you mind dropping by and stating your opinion? thanks!--TheAlphaWolf 00:00, 7 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Help

Hi. I wondered if you had any views on whether +Laburnocytisus 'Adamii' is titled correctly. I've not seen + as a prefix to plant scientific names before. Do you think this should be a cross to indicate an intergeneric hybrid - if not, any idea what + means? Cheers SP-KP 15:44, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Plant question

Oops. Sorry, you can ignore this question! I followed the graft-chimaera link and it's all explained there. Isn't Wikipedia educational?! SP-KP 15:46, 16 April 2006 (UTC)

Where did you learn that it is necessary to have it like that on Wikipedia? Where? Show me the style page/rule that dictates that, please. Otherwise I'll have to draw the obvious conclusion that you're making this stuff up as you go along. You'd be in good company on Wikipedia, if you were, and you wouldn't be the first I've caught out doing it.
 * Castanospora, et al

Just as an extra, there's a bunch of monotypic plants out there that don't feature the Wiki layout you think should exist. What's that mean? You (or somebody else) hasn't got around to "fixing" them yet? Or is there (as I suspect) variable or ad hoc consistency in how these so-called rules/styles are applied? Moreton Bay Chestnut and Viminaria to give examples. Nothing personal, mind you, it just amuses me to see all these declarations on how things should be done when they aren't done that way at all. Peter1968 12:50, 21 April 2006 (UTC)

Hi there, just wanted to say thanks for correcting the categories. I was going by the Pakistani official website which spells it as Chakor - Red legged partridge, but I couldn't find Chakor, which is why I plumped for Red-legged partridge. Eeeh by gum, I think you're the first northern editor I've come across who isn't from Scotland :) - Green Giant 14:22, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Red legged partridge to Chukar

Michael; thanks for your work on snag. I'm a bit timid where I may be accused of North American bias, so I'm pleased to see your involvement. Walter Siegmund (talk) 23:13, 26 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Snag
 * Hi Walter - thanks! I'm not aware of any US/UK difference in usage for dead trees; quite why someone put it in in the first place, I don't know - snags are also found in UK forestry. There are other colloquial uses in UK English which may/may not also occur in US (I don't know), e.g. the verb 'to snag' as in snagging (tearing) clothes on a sharp projection; not sure if they should be mentioned. - MPF 00:00, 27 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Before I discovered snag, it contained no mention of dead or dying standing trees, the most common usage in U.S forestry. The term is used to refer to large woody debris in watercourses, but woody debris is much more common now than formerly. The verb usage you mention is common here, as well as a not common colloquialism synonymous with obtain or catch, e.g.., "to snag a burger". Best wishes, Walter Siegmund (talk) 01:00, 27 April 2006 (UTC)

Hi, thanks for expanding Sous a bit. What's your WP:CITE source? &mdash; mark &#9998; 17:15, 28 April 2006 (UTC)
 * Sous

Camecípare-de-lawson is not a portuguese word. That's something I can´t tell you what it is - but not portuguese, I'm sure. The vernacular name of Chamaecyparis lawsoniana, in portuguese is, really, cedro-do-oregon or cedro-do-óregão, as I can see in a portuguese Enciclopaedia and in a good dictionary (the famous Antônio Houaiss). I know that this name is not correct in scientific terms, as this tree is not a "Cedrus" - but this is, really, the name in portuguese. Manuel Anastácio 19:58, 2 May 2006 (UTC)

Yes, Houaiss is Brazilian, but is a dictionary used in Portugal too (I'm from Portugal, and I use it). But this name (cedro-do-oregon) is, also, at "Enciclopédia Verbo da Cultura" - the more respected enciclopaedia in Portugal (our "Brittanica"). It is not a portuguese-Brazilian difference. There are no disputes about it in Wikipedia.pt (the disputes are about other things, not about the title of the articles about species - that's a pacific question). The website you looked for, uses camecípare, but that is a neologism inspired by the name of the genus Chamaecyparis. Manuel Anastácio 23:12, 2 May 2006 (UTC)

Hi MPF, I noticed you edited the Ocimum article ages ago, including the addition of 'Thai basil, another cultivar of the same species...' (as tenuiflorum). There's some disagreement about this on the Tulsi page - confusion really, since nobody can say with any authority what's the answer. Since you so confidently made that statement, perhaps you can help.
 * holy basil, thai basil, sacred basil question

I've grown different basil varieties. One was called 'Thai Basil', which is often sold at nurseries. It is much more like Ocimum basilicum in form and flavor (slightly stronger flavor than garden basil, smaller leaves, but quite similar when used in cooking). I've also grown a couple of different 'Tulsi' varieties, both clearly were Ocimum tenuiflorum. These were very different from both the 'Thai Basil' and the common garden basil, in flavor and form. Much taller, hairy (not shiny) leaves, and a flavor that is quite unlike the other basils. I wouldn't think of using it for cooking, because of the quite different scent and flavor, but do use it for tea and medicinal purposes.

So it seems to me, a gardener and not a plant taxonomist, that 'Thai Basil' is not tenuiflorum, but basilicum.

Now, there's a user on the Talk:Tulsi page who thinks that Thai Basil is the same as Tulsi/Holy Basil, which agrees with the Ocimum article. They are referring to a specific variety called 'Krapow', which I've also seen referenced elsewhere as 'Kaprao' and 'Ka phrao'. Research online shows people who put Ka phrao Thai Basil into basilicum, and people who put it into tenuiflorum.

So, which is it? I'm not emotionally vested in either answer, but am interested in finding out the real story here. Do you have some authority/reference on taxonomy that was your source, or that you can steer me toward? Thank you for any thoughts you might have on this. &#2384; Priyanath 04:28, 7 May 2006 (UTC)


 * Thank you - there's no hurry - I know it's a complicated question that I've suddenly imposed on you. &#2384; Priyanath 15:15, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

Hi, Ive read your justifications of moving trees to their scientific name, and OK I admit it is more organised and an encyclopedia should be organised, and I guess it's trivial to redirect queries.. but I cannot agree with what you've just done reverting my change to the taxobox NZ Kauri / Agathis australis. Taxobox's should be headed with the common name, New Zealand Kauri is the common name, so what's the deal? Dougalc 01:27, 9 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Common names, scientific names etc


 * Why should the article title and taxobox neccessarily have the same name? And a taxobox clearly spells out the species' full scientific name, so why would you argue it has to be at the top as well?
 * WP:TX says "The name should be the most common name when one is in widespread use.." I don't think you should be making up your own rules as you go, or you'll find tens of thousands of other pages that need to be changed to be consistent..
 * So, may I change it back?

In August 2004, you added: "Today, Jews still carry rods of almond blossom to the synagogues on great festival days." This was recently removed as unsourced and apparently inaccurate. Do you recall the source that prompted you to add this information? HKT 01:58, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Almond#Cultural_aspects
 * Thanks for getting back to me. Sorry about the mistake. This info was already removed, and the practice was apparently never done. Cheers, HKT 17:13, 10 May 2006 (UTC)

Ah, I thought that æ and œ were just spelt out b/c those characters were missing on Standard American keyboards. That would explain why Isoëtes has a trèfle on it.
 * Re: Flora of Canada

Quick note: Ohio buckeye is considered not-introduced by the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resource's Natural Heritage Information Centre (see: http://nhic.mnr.gov.on.ca/MNR/nhic/elements/el_report.cfm?elid=103000), and any tree reference guide for Ontario I've seen has included them as natives. They do have an SRANK of 1 (extremely rare) for the province of Ontario, and is only present in extreme SW Ontario (and can survive in any Carolinian environment when tended). If you know of any sources that show Ohio buckeye as introduced/exotic, I'd like to see them.

Also, you're right, this pg. is going to be huge. I've looked at the ways that other similar pages are built, and i'm thinking we may want to divide it in 5 (by genus A-E, F-J, etc.). What do you think?

ps. my access to info. on the flora of Canada is very Ontario-centric (so far, everything is based off of OMNR's NHIC). it coveres 5 of the biomes of Canada, but does not include east-coast Appalachian, west coast temperate rainforest, mountain cordillera, prairie or high-arctic species. --chris 18:39, 10 May 2006 (UTC)


 * It is very interesting that different sources of the same government show different statuses for Aesculus glabra, one shows native, the other shows introduced. Perhaps this requires more investigation? --chris 07:00, 4 June 2006 (UTC)

The three listespecies are the most common pine found at the site. It is an Eocene fossil site in Republic washington and part of the Klondike Mountain Formation. The enviroment was an upland lake in a downfalted graben and was at such an elevation to allow both subtropical and temperate species to be preserved in the lake. We have over 500 species of ID FLora and fauna. do you have any idaes as to the relating of extant and extinct species listed in wikipedia? Kevmin 06:06, 20 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Fossil Recoerd

Hi MPF - Thanks very much for correcting my image captions and pointing out my mistake :-) I have to admit I wasn't convinced it was a fir cone myself either, having had a browse of the www.pinetum.org/cones/mpfcones.htm Arboretum de Villardebelle, but I based my identification on the description at Conifer cone which seemed to imply that only firs had cones positioned away from the bases or tips of branches. Having had another read, that's actually not what the article says, so apologies for my poor identification! BTW - just noticed the name of the owner of the Arboretum... nice site! --Yummifruitbat 15:11, 20 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Larch (not fir!) cone

I think Brya redirected this to Smilacaceae because the Flora of North America does not recognize Nemexia as distinct nor the Angiosperm Phylogeny site, which (I think) are reliable authorities. So, I'm not sure if your reversion of the redirect is correct. Your thoughts on this?  SCH ZMO  ✍ 02:16, 21 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Nemexia

Please see Talk:Frost line. mikka (t) 17:12, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Frost line

Hi, as usual I've exhausted my knowledge in a new botany article. Can you help refine this? Thanks, Badagnani 00:28, 26 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Rohdea japonica

Sorry for the edit conflict; I can't stop! ;-D You can move the article as you see fit; I wasn't aware that monospecies genera get their own articles rather than a species article. Badagnani 01:07, 26 May 2006 (UTC)

The "Rhodea" redirect wasn't my idea; there is a sizeable number of websites that use this spelling (probably in the belief that the correct spelling is "wrong"!). Badagnani 01:23, 26 May 2006 (UTC)

You may be interested in the discussion at Wikipedia:WikiProject Plants#Plant article naming conventions. Alan Liefting 10:18, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Plant article naming convention

We have differed on plant article names in the past hence the reason for starting a discusion on plant article naming convention. I will be renaming the New Zealand plant articles into a more coherent system over the next few months (should really do it after my exams!!). Please bear with me and I hope that you will agree with the results. I am aiming to configure the articles so that they are categorised under the (most) common name AND the scientific name. Alan Liefting 10:30, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
 * New Zealand plant names

I did a double-take when I typo checked my entries there today -- Juniper?? -- and was delighted to see someone had inserted the correct tree name for me. Thanks! Cheers, Terry Bollinger 04:39, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Fredericktown, Missouri: Cool fix, thx!

Thank you for making propperly botanical my fumbling attempt at the Cascara article. Tom Lougheed 21:04, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Cascara

Well, he was a real human being, not just a misspelled post in an online plant database, and Sandøe Ørsted is (presumably) the way he wrote his own name. It is also the spelling used for other members of his family here. up+land 15:32, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
 * Anders Sandøe Ørsted


 * I'm sure IPNI is fine for the names of plants and the author abbreviations, but it is obviously not an authority for the real names of real people. Note that the IPNI isn't even consistent in how they render the Danish letter Ø. In "Sandøe" they have just removed the "dash" over the O, leaving it as an O, while in "Ørsted" they render it as Oe. It could just as well have been "Sandoee Oersted" or "Sandoe Orsted". If we keep to the Danish spelling we won't have to pick and choose between different incorrect attempts at "transcription". BTW, he wasn't the son of his older namesake, but his nephew. ://runeberg.org/dbl/19/0480.htmlup+land 15:47, 31 May 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for letting me know about your researching the Potentilla taxonomy stuff... I'm watching those pages anyway, so left my reply there.
 * Thanks! ...and a question.

Just a random question: what is "rejig" short for? (The only thing that comes to mind is "rejiggle".) Nice cleanup on Oxeye daisy, BTW! SB Johnny 18:00, 1 June 2006 (UTC)

Please have a look-see at Lycopersicon. I put a disambig tag on it, but is there a better tag available? Might be useful to have a " {Taxonomy-disambig} " tag? SB Johnny 14:49, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Old genera, etc.

Sorry... I'll put this on TOL. SB Johnny 14:50, 3 June 2006 (UTC)


 * LOL! You know what? I think that would indeed be a good way to treat the Fragaria situation! SB Johnny 17:33, 3 June 2006 (UTC)

Sorry about that... forgot about the "move" function. One of these days I'll figure out how to give you another star :). SB Johnny 18:10, 3 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks yet again...


 * Thanks for saying so, but I feel guilty going around and making more work for you. (Of course you realize I'll be doing that to another page or two... correctly next time!) SB Johnny 18:16, 3 June 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for starting this article, which I've expanded. Not sure about the line through the l. Smallweed 15:50, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Ludwik Mlokosiewicz

this image was taken in this area: coor dms|56|08|17.7|N|113|11|55.9|W|scale:30000, close to Wabaska-Desmarais, Alberta in 2004  Qyd(talk)19:01, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Image:Blak spruce Muskeg.JPG

I never thanked you for responding to my inquiries Wikipedia:Reference desk archive/August 2005 III#Help identifying birds|here last year. Thank you. TacoDeposit 21:00, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Belated thank you

You wanna redraw the map? Go for it! I understand the natural inadequacies of using only one meta-source to draw a distro map. To make a proper map, one would need to amass all the botanical observations of such-and-such a species, which is a daunting task. Not to mention that the scale of the UK, in comparison to the rest of the world, is quite small.
 * Drosera rotundifolia

The red/pink division was not necessary, but added to show the centres of populations. Fais que vous voudras (do as you will). --chris 18:21, 5 June 2006 (UTC)

I have no emotional connection to Category:Fagaceae, Category:Oaks, or Category:Quercus -- it just seemed redundant to have an article in more than one of them. Eoghanacht talk 13:03, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Category:Oaks

Hi Taco - Image:UnknownBird04.jpeg is a Barn Swallow Hirundo rustica, one of the American subspeces of course (without a solid dark band below the orange throat patch) - MPF 20:55, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Image:UnknownBird04.jpeg
 * Thanks again! TacoDeposit 23:57, 7 June 2006 (UTC)

I read your comment about :Image:Genova - Cimitero di Staglieno - Pantheon-2.JPG and, as I thought you were right so I rotated the picture as you suggested. Thx. --145.254.33.135 02:53, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Feat Image Candidate on Commons

Image:Globose-cactus-pink-flower-1.jpg Image:Globose-cactus-pink-flower-2.jpg Chancing that your expertise extends to cacti, can you help identify this species, or recommend someone who might? My best guess is Acanthocalycium spiniflorum, but I am not totally sure. If I can get confirmation, it would help labeling the images, and using one or the other as an illustration on the Acanthocalycium article. Thanks. &mdash; Eoghanacht  talk 17:52, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Do you know your cacti?

Thanks for commenting on the Pando (Quaking Aspen) article. We are currently trying to have it achieve featured article status. Any input on its Wikipedia:Peer_review/Pando_%28Quaking_Aspen%29|peer review would be helpful. Thank you again. Globeism 16:17, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Pando

I didn't see a need to distinguish northern coastal scrub by adding "California", as most authors don't call it "California northern coastal scrub", and I didn't know of any use of the term outside a California context. I just googled "northern coastal scrub", and of the first 80 references, 79 were to California, with one use of the term to refer to scrublands on the northern Atlantic Coast of the US. I did, however, name our local coastal prairie habitat California coastal prairie to disinguish it from Gulf coastal prairie, and made coastal prairie a disambiguation page, because "coastal prairie" is commonly used to describe both habitats. I trust your judgement, and if you think "northern coastal scrub" is used commonly enough to describe habitats outside California so that the term requires disambiguation, you are welcome to rename it, but I don't see a compelling need to do so. Tom Radulovich 14:55, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Northern coastal scrub

Hi Pengo - nice work; just to mention that in a number of cases the bot has added duplicate References headers when the header already existed (see e.g. my removal of the spare one at en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Juniperus_cedrus&diff=57798720&oldid=57333097 Juniperus cedrus - MPF 00:47, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Beastie bot - superfluous headers


 * Thanks. I've fixed this now so it looks for any heading start with "Reference" and not just plain "Reference(s)". Let me know if you find any other problems. —Pengo 04:02, 10 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Many thanks! One small one - on Cupressus dupreziana, you've set the IUCN status to EN, which applies to Cupressus dupreziana sensu lato (i.e., including Cupressus atlantica as Cupressus dupreziana var. atlantica). Here, the two taxa are treated as distinct species, for which the status for Cupressus dupreziana sensu stricto is CR (see the IUCN page for [www.redlist.org/search/details.php?species=44046 Cupressus dupreziana var dupreziana]) - MPF 16:55, 10 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Actually that's more of a major fubar than a small one. I've stopped beastie bot until I get a chance to fix the code that deals with varieties and subpopulations. Thanks for pointing this one out. Also, do you know why so many tree species are marked as "Secure"? IUCN only uses the term "least concern" and so where does "Secure" come from in this context? I haven't found a species that expands on it. —Pengo 00:57, 11 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Thanks! The varieties and subpopulations problem shouldn't matter most of the time where wiki uses the same taxonomy as IUCN, it'll only differ in the few cases where we have adopted different taxonomy.
 * The 'secure' dates back to early versions (back from the article's start in Feb 2004 by User:Tannin) of Wikipedia:Conservation status (then under the title Conservation status, which is now a different article). I used 'Secure' for all the conifers listed as "[not threatened]" in Farjon's Kew Checklist of Conifers; these are now (in Farjon's newer publications) listed as LR (lc), which wasn't used in the Kew checklist, so obviously everything that I've marked as 'Secure' can be re-tagged LR (lc). Of course I don't know about species that other people have tagged as 'Secure'! - MPF 01:54, 11 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Oops! Was in a rush and got myself confused and thought Beastie Bot had done the opposite (i.e. linked to the variety instead of the more general species page). Anyway, the confusion made me realise there may have been a bug in how it handled subpopulation entries from the red list, so at least I fixed that. I'll still have to fix it so it doesn't try to re-correct the category on Cupressus dupreziana and other changed entries next time it runs.


 * It's good to know where (many of) the "Secure" status entries come from. I was a bit uneasy about changing them before. —Pengo 10:14, 11 June 2006 (UTC)

Hello MPF. When I reorder the list into subfamilies, should I include the tribes within the subfamilies? Also, I'm only using one source [www.plantapalm.com/vpe/taxonomy/vpe_taxonomy3.htm] (from Uhl and Dransfield (1987)) and other authors may have different classification schemes. User:Schzmo User talk:Schzmo 12:35, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Arecaceae
 * OK, I've reorganized the list - but it may require some trimming. Some genera are in the list that are not in my source and I don't know if I should leave them there. There may be dispute about distinctions and synonymous names in the list. User:Schzmo User talk:Schzmo 15:10, 10 June 2006 (UTC)

Hey, thanks for helping out with some of my recent Himalayan plant stubs! I'm not so confident with botanical details, as they're far outside my training, and it's great to have the backup. So... I wonder if you'd like to work your magic on Noble rhubarb? I've nominated it for DYK, and I'm sure there's much improvement to be done. Thanks again, Melchoir 18:48, 11 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Noble rhubarb

Thank you for your welcome and tips, I think I will enjoy my time here.
 * Nice to meet you.

Catch you on the flip side. Least 22:52, 12 June 2006 (UTC)

I have studied your edits to my magnolia pages carefully and I believe I have down the pattern. However, it would be nice to have your opinion on this matter. I have made a new magnolia page and request your professional opinion. I welcome any editys, tips, and suggestions to help me become a more worthwile member. Here is a link to the page below. Thanks Sprenger's magnolia Fledgeling 02:11, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Request for review

Hi again! The category "Caryophyllales" is very strange (talk at Category_talk:Caryophyllales). I'd like to work on moving those genera subcategories to family subcategories (which seems to make more sense), but 3 questions:
 * Really strange category... don't want a war here, but....


 * 1. How do I make subcategories?
 * 2. How do I link to a category page without making the page I'm linking from turn up on the cat? (I left a msg on the Plants project page by linking to the talk instead, as I did here).
 * 3. I suppose an alternative would be to move the genera subcategories to be subcategories of the family subcategories... all rather confusing.

Thanks! SB Johnny 10:54, 13 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Thanks again... definitely seems strange to do that (I suppose if a genus had 10,000 members it'd be a different story). For the sake of server space, I thought it might be good to delete the genus cat pages once they're empty. I just use the tag for that? SB Johnny 11:46, 13 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Actually, I already put a speedy tag on "Dianthus"... Amaranthus will take some doing if you're in the mood for some mindless recatting :). Do you know if anyone has a bot for this? It seems to be one user that did all the doing here (hence my concern about a war), and he or she did an awful lot of them! SB Johnny 12:01, 13 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Cool. I'll do a bit more on moving the families to cats, and at least get the genus pages into them.SB Johnny 12:10, 13 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Thanks for the tip on the votes. Those 2 (1 genus) categories involved in the proposal are also rooted by the same user. SB Johnny 00:36, 14 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Yeah, I keep meaning to get more hellebore articles written. One question though: Why isn't it "a member of the buttercup family, Ranunculaceae,...", rather than the buttercup family Ranunculaceae?" Seems like there should be a comma there.
 * Also, found the tag I was looking for: . Maybe just put that on the genus cat pages and concentrate on moving things from order to family? SB Johnny 00:57, 14 June 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for the tip. It is a type of Parodia rather than Acanthocalycium. User:Eoghanacht User_talk:Eoghanacht 13:25, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Cactus

Hi. Can you direct me to information on dupl wikilinks. I saw you had recently removed some and I wanted to make sure I knew the preferred style and usage.--Snorklefish 19:55, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Duplicate Wikilinks

Hi, I was wondering why you removed [herbsociety.org/basil/index.php] from Basil as a "commercial" link. According to the website the organization is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. I too have spent time removing spam from Wikipedia, but I don't see how the link is inappropriate in this instance. Wmahan. 01:45, 16 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Basil


 * Thanks for the explanation that you didn't remove the link just for being commercial. I'm not an expert on the subject so I will defer to your judgment. Wmahan. 01:59, 16 June 2006 (UTC)

I happen to have stumbled into the long-winded edit war you two are having over at Botanical name. Now I see that this is not limited and the both of you have doing constant WP:RV|reverting without justifying or discussing whatsoever. I am this close to fulfilling a RFC as a third party, because I firmly believe your actions (on both sides) are not conducive to improvement of the article. While I do see that Brya's edit do contradict the MoS, you have shown little interest in actually discussing the edits with him. I expect to see the both of you justify (and giving the exact pages you are refering to, as the manual of style is not exactly easy to navigate) any reverts to the following pages on the respective talk pages: Circeus 15:04, 16 June 2006 (UTC)
 * You and User:Brya
 * Ghillean Prance
 * Loranthaceae
 * Botanical name
 * Leitneriales
 * Santalales
 * Misodendraceae
 * Family (biology)
 * Coniferae
 * Ranunculaceae


 * It's not about not editing the pages, but justifying your reverts. If Brya cannot properly justify his owns (and I can't see how he could), the entire thing can be solved much more easily. Circeus 16:15, 16 June 2006 (UTC)

I have all but given up on being a regular contributor to Wikipedia, largely because it has become evident I was fighting a losing battle against those who were not necessarily more knowledgeable, or better editors, but apparently have limitless time on their hands to edit thousands of articles. However, I have been following this "discussion" with some amusement and feel compelled to come out of retirement to comment.

Brya has (apparently unilaterally) decided to follow a typographical practice for botanical nomenclature used in printing the ICBN that does not even rise to the level of "example" (as defined within the Code): the italicization of all botanical names at all ranks. As others have discovered, this leads to stylistic inconsistency between botanical and zoological Wikipedia articles, and between those botanical articles which Brya has or has not edited. In the end this is about as inconsequential a disagreement as I have ever seen on Wikipedia, but as Brya clearly has no intention of accommodating, cooperating or compromising with, or conceding to, any other editor, and has displayed such breathtaking arrogance in all his (her?) past and present editing, I hereby award him (her?) my "Does Not Play Well With Others" award.

Now to the matter at hand: the ICBN (Saint Louis Code, published 2000), in its preface, states, "As in the previous edition, scientific names under the jurisdiction of the Code, irrespective of rank, are consistently printed in italic type. The Code sets no binding standard in this respect, as typography is a matter of editorial style and tradition not of nomenclature. Nevertheless, editors and authors, in the interest of international uniformity, may wish to consider adhering to the practice exemplified by the Code, which has been well received in general and is being followed in an increasing number of botanical and mycological journals."

I became curious as to how "well received" this practice has been and to what extent it has been followed, so I did a quick survey of the most prominent botanical, mycological, and phycological journals in my library. I was hard pressed to find any that italicize botanical names above genus. Of 30 journals I checked, only 3--exactly 10%--have followed the example set by the ICBN. (The actual percentage is probably lower, but I did not check every minor journal.) The journals I found using italicization are Edinburgh Journal of Botany, Mycotaxon, and Kew Bulletin. In my judgment, it would appear that the non-binding practice of the ICBN is little more than a quaint typographical convention that has not been widely adopted. MrDarwin 17:24, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
 * It is regrettable that on the Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Brya page MPF interpreted my comments to mean that I left Wikipedia as a result of Brya's edits. I have found Brya intractable, uncooperative, arrogant and extremely frustrating but my frustration with numerous editors (not just Brya) was but one of many reasons for my absence from Wikipedia, time being the major one. MrDarwin 01:38, 23 June 2006 (UTC)

I'm trying to avoid making a third revert on Tautonym (and Tautonymy). Tried to use the dispute/contradiction tag, but I'm not sure I got it in there right (doesn't link to the contradicted article). talk:Tautonym|Brya's reasons seem to have something to do with the unfair treatment of botanists by zoologists, which I'm not sure I get. What should my next step be here? (Getting pretty tired of this.) SB Johnny 08:35, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Now it's user:SB_Johnny and user:Brya

See Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Brya. This is going nowhere at the moment. SB Johnny 09:30, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
 * RfC opened

Image:UnknownBird05.jpeg Is this a Great Blue Heron? Thanks, TacoDeposit 17:24, 17 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Bird
 * Thanks! TacoDeposit 14:16, 18 June 2006 (UTC)

Really strange series of circular redirects on Tetragonia, most apparently added today. Is there a policy on this that you know of (if so, where)?SB Johnny 23:23, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Circular redirects?


 * Thanks. I assume there is a policy against them then, eh? SB Johnny 23:37, 19 June 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for your response to my query about Hardiness zone. As you might have inferred, I'm a new contributor who's trying to be "...bold, but not reckless". I had already noticed your addition to the HZ article and concur about its (HZ's) somewhat questionable usefullness. My original intent had been to add some minor but useful content to non-controversial articles by way of getting my feet wet in WP. Under the circumstances, I really appreciate the advice from someone (you) who clearly has a much deeper understanding of the topic than I do. One of the things I've realized here at WP is that a hobbiest, no matter how enthusiastic, needs to listen carefully to longtime contributors who actually have credentials in a subject :) Maybe I'll just try doing clean-up on needy articles for awhile and leave content to those who know more than I. With tongue firmly in cheek, but a sincere "Thank you" on my lips (or at least my keyboard), I'm off to look for something to putter with :)  Doc Tropics 19:41, 20 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Hardy Irises and other trivial content

I don't mind you putting that image back on the userbox. Not at all. --Kschwerdt514 06:04, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Template:User birder

Do you mind if I change the picture on the template to that of an Arctic Tern, another bird that is seen on virtually every coast? --Kschwerdt514 07:55, 21 June 2006 (UTC)

I have changed the picture in the template from that of a Ruddy Turnstone to that of an Arctic Tern. I used the tern image that you took. Nice image! --Kschwerdt514 08:33, 21 June 2006 (UTC)

Reviewing the saltmarsh article history, it appears that "salt marsh" has been the preferred term in the article body since the article was created. I support moving the article to salt marsh. Since you were involved with the article early on, I thought it would be good to get your insight on this. -- Paleorthid 06:07, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
 * salt marsh

How do I bring a photo from the Wikimedia Commons to Wikipedia without re-uploading it? --Kschwerdt514 02:55, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Wikicommons-Wikipedia

In the American Sweetgum wiki you added the quantitative information (Sept 2004) that the gumball fruits have 40 to 60 capsules, each with a terminal spike and two small seeds. In fact, it's the other way around-- each capsule, as you can count for yourself, has two spikes and one seed. That gives each gumball about 100 total spikes, not 50. Later, when the gumballs open, each empty seed capsule (as I see from those still around from last year, now dry) is flanked by the two spikes on the wedges that define it, in a very cone-like way. But still 100 spikes or so. Counting can be done by cutting them off methodically in pairs, with some scissors, in case you're not sure of yourself.
 * American Sweetgum apparent error

Amazingly, this piece of misinformation (2 seeds and one spike per capsule) has propagated itself all over the web. I don't know where it started from. But these trees are all up and down the streets of the city where I live, and I'm beginning to think that some biologists can't count! Or don't look! It's sort of like Aristotle and the number of teeth a horse has. Steve 01:43, 25 June 2006 (UTC)


 * Oh, although each capsule of a gumball certainly has two spikes, I have not excluded the posibility that each capsule has 2 spikes and TWO seeds. I can't see the seeds in my last year's specimens, so I can't check how many there are/were. This year's are too young. It would make sense to have one seed per spike (thus two per capsule), since I assume the "spikes" are stigmas or styles (upper carpel reminants, anyway) so each one really ought to be associated with its own ovary and seed below.Steve 17:45, 25 June 2006 (UTC)

User_talk:Clickie#Protologue. So Index Kewensis is wrong.--Curtis Clark 00:01, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Acoelorrhaphe

Have a look at Organic_lawn_management... seems pretty much a how-to manual, that might be a good basis for a wikibook or chapter. But how is this officially done? Copy-paste is not a good option, as it loses the history. I used a referance link to a historical version of a different WP article for a WB chapter in another case, but that article was only partially how-to, while this case seems a severe example and the article may not be salvagable. SB Johnny 21:46, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Transwiking issues...
 * There's a reference desk? Where? SB Johnny 21:58, 28 June 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for catching the error on the Middle Atlas translation. I'd intended to convert it to km2, but didn't properly complete the translation (too much math I guess); your attention to detail corrected a glaring error. This is what makes Wikipedia work! Thanks - Williamborg 00:23, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
 * Great Job

Thanks for your note. I'd never heard "sugi" used in English before, which gave me a bit of pause, but you're right--it wouldn't make sense to use a mistranslation. Thanks for picking up on that!
 * Hi MPF

By the way, the "dousugi" in Uozu are pretty great. If you're ever passing through, please check them out. I believe there's some interesting trees in nearby Nyuuzen as well.

Hi MPF. I simply used the "snapshot" tool in Acrobat to copy the image. Then I just put it on Paint and saved as a .jpg. I can just save the file from Paint as a .png instead. However, I didn't think a high resolution would be needed for a range map, so long as the range was clearly visible, and the .jpg files were smaller. SCH ZMO ✍ 01:17, 1 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Range Maps

I'm curious, why did you decide to eliminate the cat rather than moving all the Quercus from Category:Fagaceae to Category:Oaks and renaming the latter Category:Quercus?--Curtis Clark 15:39, 3 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Category:Oaks
 * Makes sense. Certainly the other genera aren't big enough to warrant categories.--Curtis Clark 19:11, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

The Western Caucasus Reserve is in Europe but Turkey and Georgia are in Asia the latter also being in the Middle East, and the Nordmann Fir extends into both regions.
 * Nordmann Fir

Hi. While there is nothing wrong with your urban legend, I think the inclusion of an (unverifiable) story which is basically a joke in a serious article on a subject which is fairly iconic to many people (including me; I'm trying to honestly reveal my POV here) is inappropriate. No disrespect to you or your intentions in adding the info is implied.
 * Forth Bridge

(There's a similar thing on the Tay Bridge article, in that an urban legend about Karl Marx occasionally surfaces there; I think it is more noteworthy than the story about the Forth though) --Guinnog 16:18, 7 July 2006 (UTC)

MPF, thanks for your note. We've arrived at a rather different way of doing this among the bird people, i.e. every family, genus etc gets it own category, so that we reflect the "Tree of Life" in the category system, even if this means categories with very small numbers of members. There was quite a bit of discussion about this but that's what was settled on. My creation of Myriophyllum was based on the same reasoning, but I guess you and the other plant people have discussed this and come to different conclusions - can you let me know the agreed categorisation approach for plants is documented so I can understand it more fully and don't go wading in and messing things up? Cheers SP-KP 17:36, 7 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Plant categorisation

I personally do not think everything should be moved to its scientific names. They are only used when the common names are confusing (other species with the same name) or when there are two equally used names for the same species. In those cases, having a comon name confuses the user. I agree, there will be some inconsistency but most will be under their unconfusing comon name. And if a species has a infrequent, but used second comon name, it can be made into a redirect. -- Kim van der Linde at venus 13:13, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Acer species
 * The discussion was open for an extended period to start with due to the backlog at WP:RM, which is normally 5 days. Furthermore, when deciding what to do, consensus is one thing, but the arguments can be weighted in light of guidelines and policies as well. I am quite aware of the taxonomic corner as I contribute frequently there, and the situation you do not like does occur frequently. If there is consensus in a later stage to move the page back per your arguments, I will move it back. See talk page of Acer negundo for more arguments. -- Kim van der Linde at venus 15:45, 9 July 2006 (UTC)

Sorry I had to vote against you there (and worse, change the poll!), but you and I just went through a horrible time dealing with someone who wanted to "change the facts on the ground and argue the theory later", and I think we should apply the same rules to ourselves. SB Johnny 19:10, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Acer negundo -> Acer in general

Hi MPF, I didn't remove the word "fuck" from the fuchsia article merely because of some Puritan objection to profanity. It just had absolutely nothing to do with the article, and was totally gratuitous. (See the policies on being encyclopedic and verifiable.) As a result, I'm re-removing it.
 * Fuchsia

If an edit is discussed on the talk page, please discuss it before reverting said edit. Ckerr 05:40, 11 July 2006 (UTC)

Hello MPF, Just want to say thanks for fixing that image for me. It looks beautiful. I am still quite new at this. I really appreciate it--Merkurix 09:27, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Shiitake

Chrysanthemum has some strange formatting issues (huge white space due to the boxes). I don't know how to fix it, but have noted your skill at that (let me know if you fix it, so I can look at the history and see how it's done!). SB Johnny 10:15, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Format problem
 * Yup, that did it. SB Johnny 10:32, 12 July 2006 (UTC)

The official and commonly used name of the mountain range is Nur Mountains not Amanos which is the other (and correctly spelled name) but much lesser used. The name "Amonos" is misspelled! If you don't belive look at atlases and maps.
 * Nur Mountains

Dear MPF, Thank you for cleanup of the Jute page. I am also interested in cleaning up the page. Because, I have contributed most of the contents and images in the articles. I have also created some related articles like: Jute cultivation, History of jute fiber, etc. to make the Jute article more attractive and clean.
 * Link Cleanup from Jute

But, I have used some of the contents from our sites. Since you have cleaned up our link from the page, it makes our site look like other sites that uses free contents from Wikipedia. I am not adding any of my links, unless you suggest me any alternative.

Best regards. Asif Anwar Bangladesh

You changed the picture in the page Larch. I think Larix_griffithii.jpg is much more informative and encyclopedic than a simple photo that you put in the page. From this photo it is impossible to see the tree's features. I suggest you to return Larix_griffithii.jpg Olegivvit 10:37, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Larch

I look forward for the translation from the German P. daurica article and will certainly take part in the contribution to it. Orjen 19:11, 19 July 2006 (CET)
 * Paeonia daurica

Quick question. Your last edit to this page removed the TOC. Is that a MoS rule for short(er) articles? Just confused and looking for clarity. Thanks! --Rkitko 02:12, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Tree of heaven

Is there a special reason that you want a long list with dozens of dead links? (You can reply here) Han-Kwang 18:21, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Cherry
 * Hi Han-Kwang - yes; it is a species list of cherries, much like the species lists on numerous other pages. They're not dead links, just links not born yet, but which will be sometime (when someone gets round to doing pages for each species!) - MPF 21:37, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Maybe I'll start a few of those. Do you think that a list of hybrids or notable cultivars, such as Kanzan and Yoshino should be made?  This should be on a separate list page IMO.  I thought about making ornamental cherry and ornamental crab apple pages.  --Kalmia 22:24, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Hi Kalmia - good idea. There's already a page on ornamental cherries at Sakura, and I guess a few of the most important cultivars deserve pages of their own (like e.g. Peace (rose) does). Not so sure about the crab apples, as there are not so many individually well-known cultivars as there are for the cherries; they might be better discussed (at least for the moment, but see how the page size progresses) under Malus. - MPF 22:38, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
 * I just made a redirect for Ornamental cherry to Sakura. --Kalmia 23:42, 22 July 2006 (UTC)

Image:GullWasteFlight.jpg Image:Agullonstone.jpg
 * Could you identify this?

While taking some "in flight" photos of various birds (that I uploaded to Commons), I got the attached picture of bird carrying unknown object, but unfortunately even though I have browsed through various bird pages, I am still uncertain about this.

I am almost certain that this is some kind of gull. My best bet would be to categorise it as juvenile Larus canus, as the size would match mature Larus canus. In the place where I took this in Helsinki the species is common. But to avoid misleading filename, I would like to have a second opinion or positive identification.

Could help with this or point to someone who could help? --Thermos 07:12, 23 July 2006 (UTC)

PS. The birds in two pictures are not the same bird, just same kind of bird


 * Thank you very much for identifying the birds and for your kind compliments about my photos. And in fact, even more so for correcting my mistake about canada goose. Your correction could not have came at the better time. See my user page at commons... : )


 * Well... In few days I have now taken about 1.000 shots of birds in flight. Let's see what I can contribute - it just takes time to sort throug the images. Many thanks for your help.

Please see discussion page at wikiproject birds. Thanks. -Natureguy1980 17:55, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
 * scrub jays

Hmm, interesting. I honestly don't recognize this as any European species. I'll carry on searching but do you think it may have been photographed in captivity? Richard Barlow 08:20, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Butterfly pic
 * Hi, I've left a note on the photographer's talk page in Commons and asked if anyone in Wikipedia:WikiProject Arthropods can help. I'll let you know. Richard Barlow 09:27, 27 July 2006 (UTC)

I don't know if you'd noticed but the photographer has identified the species and amended the image name - I've added it to the gallery at Parthenos sylvia. Richard Barlow 07:44, 29 July 2006 (UTC)

See Talk:Fat Hen for details. "Fat Hen" is a regional name, in my region (where it is common and native), it's always called "lambsquarters". The capital H in the title is also problematic, I would think. The species is Chenopodium album. It's currently a redirect, so I can't move it myself. Maybe I should consider an RfA, eh? -- User:SB_Johnny | User talk:SB_Johnny 12:01, 28 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Need a deletion to move a page...

Adding: It's called lambsquarters throughout New England and much of the rest of the Eastern US, and appears under that name in most weed guides as well. User:SB_Johnny | User talk:SB_Johnny 12:03, 28 July 2006 (UTC)


 * Huh. Never heard of that cut of mutton, but then lamb and mutton aren't real big around here anyway. Disambig sounds like a good idea... allowing others to also learn something new every day :). -- User:SB_Johnny | User talk:SB_Johnny 12:34, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

Wht are you moving the footnotes to before the punctuation in juniper berry? See Wikipedia:Footnotes#Place_ref_tag_after_punctuation for MOS recommendation. Bunchofgrapes (talk) 16:35, 29 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Footnotes before punctuation
 * I responded over on my talk page, in case you don't have it watched. Bunchofgrapes (talk) 19:47, 29 July 2006 (UTC)

MPF, you added a Template:Globalize|globalize template to the spruce beer article some time back. I wanted to let you know that I re-organized the article in a "universal definition->general types->regional varieties" manner to give the article a more global scope. I personally do not know anything about Russian or Siberian use of spruce to make flavored beverages (as you give as an example in Talk:Spruce beer). Cheers. -- BlueCanoe 19:34, 29 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Spruce beer

Why delete the extra pic?
 * Greater Crested Tern

In Australia this is just "Crested Tern" List of Australasian birds|(see HANZAB list). It's "Lesser" for bengalensis, so "Greater" seems redundant? --Glen Fergus 12:14, 30 July 2006 (UTC)

I've undeleted Image:Fossil Plant Ginkgo.jpg (image undeletion is possible now). It's not high-resolution, but it probably should be moved to Commons in JPEG format (considering file size). Conscious 16:08, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
 * Deleted image
 * Re-deleted and marked PNG as a duplicate. Conscious 16:32, 31 July 2006 (UTC)

Hi, I've made an article on a genus, Stephania -- could you take a look and fix anything that needs to be fixed? Thanks, Badagnani 22:19, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
 * New article

Great, thanks! Two things: is the kingdom subcategory in the taxobox right (it looks funny), and are we now adding authorities for all species in the list of species? If so, I'll try to do that in future when I add new genii and am able to find the authorities. Badagnani 01:00, 2 August 2006 (UTC)

I figured as much, since that really makes sense. I just used Flora of Argentina (which included stuff that just grows there but not necessarily native) as an example and used some of the plants that had Armenian names I recognized from this list (www.armeniapedia.org/index.php?title=Armenia's_Flora) which again is just a list of everything that grows in Armenia--Eupator 00:46, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Re:Cat:Flora of Armenia

Hi. Thought you might be interested in improving this stub. Snottygobble 02:01, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Callitris glaucophylla
 * Hi Snottygobble - thanks for the note; bit of a tricky one, as other authorities (e.g. Blake 1959, Proc. Roy. Soc. Qld. 70: 33-46; Farjon 2005, Monograph of Cupressaceae and Sciadopitys; followed online by e.g. [www.iucnredlist.org IUCN]) treat it as a synonym of C. columellaris, so it is a very disputed taxon. The reasons Blake and Farjon give for lumping seem fairly convincing; conversely, the grounds for splitting given by Thompson & Johnson (Telopea 2 (6): 731-736) seem decidedly trivial ("An inland species; foliage usually glaucous" for C. glaucophylla, vs. "A coastal species; foliage usually green" for C. columellaris); Farjon points out that mixed green and glaucous seedlings can derive from a single parent tree (and your photo shows a very green tree, too!). My inclination would be to accept the merge and move the wiki page to C. columellaris'', but include some discussion of the case from both sides; I'll wait to see what you think before doing anything - MPF 09:49, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
 * I didn't realise it was contentious - I just assumed that C. columellaris was an old name and Wikipedia/Wikispecies needed updating. Your response indicates that you have a much better grasp of the situation than me, so feel free to do what you think best. Apologies if I've made more work for you. Snottygobble 12:02, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Nice work. Pleasure working with you as always. Snottygobble 11:45, 5 August 2006 (UTC)

Here's another new one at which your help would be appreciated! Badagnani 07:01, 4 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Anisodus

Hi MPF. Thanks for the link on the cactus article. I've been around a while, but am fairly new to editing. I see its fairly easy to find the right links now. Cheers Harristweed 02:49, 5 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks for the fix

Image:Jun com cones.jpg Hi MPF, I had protected it when it was DYK image. It doesn't need to be protected on Commons. Thanks -- Samir  धर्म 00:37, 6 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks! - MPF 00:40, 6 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Actually, the procedure goes the other way: when an from Commons is to appear on the Main Page, it is temporarily uploaded to en to be protected. Circeus 07:09, 6 August 2006 (UTC)

Hi Walter - could you look out for a photo of Douglas Maple (Acer glabrum, a.k.a. Rocky Mountain Maple), please? There's a new article and all it's got is a grotty line drawing - thanks, MPF 20:44, 7 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Pic request
 * Hi MPF; I'll watch for it. Thanks for bringing it to my attention. Best wishes, Walter Siegmund (talk) 23:09, 7 August 2006 (UTC)

I am not going to let you get away with actual vandalism of the page just because you intentionally work in a few new changes while you're at it, purely to prevent reversion. If you continue to violate wikipedia guidelines by changing the established system of measure on these pages, and altering their documentation, you will be blocked. --Kaz 15:06, 9 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Stop Vandalizing Web Pages, MPF...


 * MPF's edit did not violate guidelines. Wikipedia:Manual of Style (dates and numbers)#Units of measurement says (and has done for months):
 * ''Conversions should generally be included and not be removed.
 * ''If editors cannot agree about the sequence of units, put the source value first and the converted value second.
 * ''If for some reason the choice of units is arbitrary, choose SI units as the main unit, with other units in parentheses. For subjects dealing with the United States, it might be more appropriate to use U.S. measurements first, i.e. mile, foot, U.S. gallon.
 * Applying this to MPF's edit:
 * MPF included conversions in conformance with guidelines. These should not have been removed; removing them was a violation of the guideline.
 * Clearly editors cannot agree about the sequence of units. But the article does not cite its sources, so it is not possible to put the source value first and the converted value second.
 * The choice of units is therefore arbitrary, so MPF put the SI units as the main unit, in accordance with the guideline. The subject of the article is not a subject dealing with the United States, so the exception does not apply.
 * Snottygobble 01:39, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
 * First, the guidelines also say that if a page has an established standard, it remains. You don't go in and undo the entire page without better cause than "well, I like the other standard more".


 * Second, as I just pointed out below, the units used by the source material are obvious, all you have to do is google almost ANY cultivar of pepper along with first the word "inches", then the word "centimeters". Almost all English-language pepper (and tomato, and many other) references on the web use the English system. The ratio is generally well over 100:1 "inches" over centimeters.


 * Third, MPF did remove English measurements entirely, from several of the pages I created or edit, and a skim through his "contributions" will show that he does this regularly. The sole reason he switched to putting English measurements in parens, instead of simply deleting them entirely, on JUST the pepper cultivars page is that I told him to when I reverted his deletion of the English measurements. On the tomato cultivars page, on the other hand, he deleted the English measurements entirely, as he did on several other pages for specific plants at about the same time. --Kaz 05:53, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Apropos of the general question, most measurements of plant parts are generated initially in SI units, since they are made by botanists, who use SI uniformly for everthing but time (they still use minutes, hours, etc.) and temperature (most use Celsius). The only systematic exception is botanists in the United States and Canada prior to the early 20th Century, who routinely used inches and lines. So in referenced material, the SI measurements will almost always be the source value.


 * Units for area and distance overland, and for elevation, are more likely to be in feet and acres in the US even in the latter half of the 20th Century; I have reference books that give elevations in feet and corolla length in mm. My theory (based on my experience and that of others) is that automobile odometers in the US still read in miles (requiring a conversion to km of "5 mi. east of Whoville"), topographic maps often include the old Township/Range system of 640-acre squares, and many of us purchased altimeters that read in feet so that we could adjust them against benchmarks and highway markers already in feet. So these measures in US sources are most often converted to SI units (although the original measures are almost never preserved).--Curtis Clark 04:12, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Actually, most vegetable cultivar measurements are done in English units. Notice what happens when, for List of chili pepper cultivars, you google "habanero" with "inches", and then with "centimeters". 53,200 to 820. How about with Jalapeno: 170,000 to 930. "Numex Big Jim", 78 to 3. "Chile negro" 405 to 1. Ancho: 116,000 to 598.


 * There is a titanic dominance of cultivar measurements by English. You find the same thing if you search for tomato cultivars and ounces/grammes, or carrots and inches/centimeters, or apples ounces/grammes, et cetera. The de facto standard on the 'net, from whence we get our references, is clearly English, not metric. --Kaz 06:07, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Look more closely. You did an unintelligent search. Did you try with the spelling centimetres? Did you look with the standard abbreviation cm? Or that the measurement may be cited in millimetres / mm? When you do that, you'll see that metric is in a clear lead. Just now, habanero+inches: 53,200; habanero+cm: 82,600; habanero+mm: 50,700, so the total for metric is somewhere between 82,600 and (82,600 + 50,700) = potentially 133,300 - MPF 08:29, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


 * I got my doctorate at an agricultural university in the United States, and I currently work at another one, and every agricultural scientist I know measures plant parts in SI units (even though they still measure fields in acres). The issue here is that the measurements are translated into inches for the American non-scientist audience, and then, absent the original data, converted back into cm by Wikipedia editors. At that point, the original source measurements are unavailable, which would suggest falling back to the "arbitrary" guideline. The best route, of course, is to use data from the primary literature, but it's a lot more work to find.--Curtis Clark 13:55, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


 * While I personally prefer SI (easier to use), a lot of US readers (not including myself, but I'm not the only US reader of wikipedia) really have trouble visualising SI measurements. Why not just put them in parentheses? -- SB_Johnny | talk 14:15, 10 August 2006 (UTC)


 * If both measurements are present, it shouldn't matter which is in parentheses.--Curtis Clark 16:42, 10 August 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for the info. I have replaced Image:Cedar lined path to the Togakushi shrine1.jpg and Image:Cedar lined path to the Togakushi shrine2.jpg by Image:Tree lined path to the Togakushi shrine1.jpg and Image:Tree lined path to the Togakushi shrine2.jpg. Best wishes -- Chris 73 | Talk 23:29, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Sugi

Oh, that's confusing, I read in a book it was listed as Dacrydium kirkii, but anyway, who cares! Thanks mate -- Lego@lost 21:08, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanx

I had no idea; in a high school vocabulary course this was in the textbook: when to use "healthy" and when to use "healthful". "Healthy", we were taught, refers to one's body, and "healthful" refers to some activity or food that might contribute to one's health. I'm not entirely convinced that these usages are not more widespread than you claim, and I'd like to see evidence of this, either from OED or some similar source. Badagnani 22:57, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Healthful
 * Great, thanks for checking! I checked too and found that "healthy" is perfectly fine to speak of foods or activities, as it's been used that way for hundreds of years -- and that people who insist on using "healthful" are "swimming against the tide of history".  I just took what I'd learned in school as the gospel, I suppose, as many of us do.  Good to learn things like this.  Badagnani 17:07, 13 August 2006 (UTC)

Hi MPF. I think you're quite correct about the original spelling, but I suspect that a formal name change has been made....see http://www.ipni.org/ipni/plantsearch?request_type=search&output_format=query&ret_defaults=on Paul venter 12:15, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Swietenia

Greetings. I'm sure I've missed pertinent discussions on the capitalization debate in either WP:TOL or WP:PLANTS. If you know specifically where they are, I'd appreciate the links :-)
 * Red Alder

Second, as you may have noticed, I removed said capitals in error on the titled page above. Common names of plants are not proper names in and of themselves. I'm of the opinion that plant names should only contain capitals when a portion of their name refers to a specific place or name. I've noticed that you're of the opposite opinion. The only argument in favor of that formatting that I've seen is that it nicely demarcates what is and what is not the plant's common name in prose text. While I agree in principle that it's an easy way to signal the reader that this is the plant's name, I disagree in practice and still believe this to be a misuse of capitalization. If you could provide further thoughts on the topic, I would read it with interest.

Third, I was wondering if we could engage in this discussion on WP:PLANTS or WP:TOL so that others in the community could see it and give their opinions. Since I haven't been around as long as you, I defer to you whether or not there has been sufficient coverage of this debate in that community recently--if not, I'll move this note over to WP:PLANTS so we can discuss there (or you can, if you wish).

Thanks! Best, Rkitko 16:24, 16 August 2006 (UTC)


 * I agree with Rkitko. Let's move this to WP:PLANTS, since other groups, such as birds, have different traditions.--Curtis Clark 17:01, 16 August 2006 (UTC)


 * It's been discussed on numerous occasions in the WP:TOL talk archives; take a look through. Generally, there has been a small majority in favour of caps for various practical reasons, e.g. a wild cherry (any species of Prunus growing in its natural environment) is not necessarily the same as a Wild Cherry (the common name of the particular species Prunus avium). Also, please, whatever you want to do, it is not a good idea to subdivide species into two different groups based on the (often very obscure) etymology of the name (e.g. is Pohutukawa a proper name? Do you know the Maori etymology?? I don't!). As for what tradition it follows - you'll find that most field guides use caps for plant (and other living things) names (and have done so for a long time, e.g. Preston's (1948) North American Trees). - MPF 17:30, 16 August 2006 (UTC)


 * I see the issue as a corollary to the ever-present question of "what is a common name", and the tendency (regrettable in my view) to standardize common names as an alternative to scientific names. In ordinary English running text (at least in this hemisphere), truly vernacular names of plants are almost never capitalized; it would look strange to write "I made a meal of Potatoes, Tomatoes, and Spinach, sauteed in Olive oil and seasoned with Black Pepper", even though all those names refer to single species of plants. Likewise, walking through the Red Alders and California Bays and seeing a Northern Oriole flying toward the Coast Redwoods looks a bit strange in text, despite "Northern Oriole" being properly capitalized according to AOU usage. I could follow a consensus to capitalize all parts of a common name in an article title (although I disagree), but to capitalize all common names in an article such as the running-text list Tribulus terrestris IMO pushes the limits of typographic acceptability.--Curtis Clark 18:10, 16 August 2006 (UTC)


 * I copied everything over to Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Plants#Common name capitalization (article titles and in text). --Rkitko 18:49, 16 August 2006 (UTC)

Hey, MPF, the article I created, Dacrydium kirkii right, you changed it to Halocarpus kirkii, is that pronounced hello-car-pus kirk-eye or hello-car-pus kirk-ee-eye? Could you tell me, cheers -- Lego@lost 19:10, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Pronounciation

I was wondering if you'd be willing to clean up a few page histories on articles I'm copying to wikibooks for "how-to-grow forking". The problem is that a lot of the more common plants have enormous histories, in part because of vandalism, spamming, and the reversions of the vandalisms and spams. Is there any reason that can't be cleaned out? (Would save server space too, I assume).
 * Page history cleanups for a few articles

For now I can just link to the version I forked from, but it's better to copy it over, and I'd rather have just a record of the 100 or so contributions than the record of who-knows-how-many vandalisms. -- SB_Johnny | talk 15:48, 17 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Oh, I forgot: Basil is one, I'll be doing Rosemary, Cucumber, Beet, and Chamomile over the next week or so. -- SB_Johnny | talk 15:50, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
 * And while you're at it, Thymus vulgaris redirects to Thyme. Argh! -- SB_Johnny | talk 16:02, 17 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Yup, it's been done. Not sure how though. I'll probably know soon enough :). -- SB_Johnny | talk 16:18, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Huh, you're right... no such tool. -- SB_Johnny | talk 18:30, 24 August 2006 (UTC)

Sounds like your invetiation yielded some substance. I plowed through pages attempting to narrow down the tree. Thanks. I'll remove the leaf if it is not already gone Noles1984 21:44, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Chalk Maple v. Red Maple

Curious, must have been an accidental exposure of internal web pages - you can see it in Google cache as [72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:MZG2JtIO_2QJ:www2.botany.gu.se/staff/evawal/oleaceae/menodora.html+menodora+evawal&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=1] Downside of using web pages instead of printed works as refs... Stan 23:41, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Menodora

Hi MPF. Where do I find (if any) a complete list of alphabetic sorted interwiki language-names ? With thanks. Eras-mus 20:09, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Interwiki

MPF, you wrote: "Image compressed by 60% to save Wikipedia space" - this isn't necessary, space is not a problem, it is better to upload the full resolution. - MPF 21:33, 17 August 2006 (UTC)"
 * File Compression

Actually file compression is important for first time visitors, dial-up users, and those concerned about cache their size. I will always compress .jpg files as long as image quality is not lost. If I can upload a 400x400 .jpg at say 16,000 bytes vs. 350,000 bytes, I'll do it. Size does matter. :-) Noles1984 13:39, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

Hello, I uploaded this picture I took in Monument Valley. I have no idea which species of cactus it is ? Thanks in advance. Poppypetty 09:27, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Image:Cactus Monument Valley.jpg
 * Thanks a lot. Poppypetty 09:48, 20 August 2006 (UTC)

MPF, thank you for the warm welcome to Wikipedia. As everyone, I just want to contribute to what I think will become THE reference source. I'm a newbie, although an already addicted one, so if you spot any mistakes on my Wikiquette, bare with me, it was done in goodwill.
 * Thank you!

RE: the pine, on my next trip to the countryside, I'll make sure to get the specific info for you (GPS) as well as extra photographs of that and other pine species in the region.

One last thing, I wish to setup my user page, and a little guidance would be much appreciated.

Gretings from Guatemala! -- Virgilrm 14:55, 20 August 2006 (UTC)

You wrote: "On pic size - generally, people with dial-up etc will only look at the thumbnails in the page; the full-size pic can be a megabyte or five without affecting this, so large image files aren't a problem (that's one of the nice things about wikipedia!)"
 * Files
 * How can you make a general statement that dial-up users generally only look at thumbs? Have you done a poll? There's nothing to indicate whether the thumb leads to 14,000 bytes or 5MB in size. Noles1984 18:12, 20 August 2006 (UTC)

Hi Michael, I would like to know your opinion on the Flora categories. In Portuguese the capital letter doesn't have so much importance as in English, after having created these categories I did notice that the best would be to write them like flora and not Flora, what do you think? I would delete them now, if it is necessary, as the work is just in the beginning or would it stay how it is? Your opinion is very important. Thank you.Berton 15:23, 22 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Flora Cats
 * With relationship to the "formula" Flora by country, did you answer very well, but my main doubt would be with relationship to the "formula" Flora by region, for example: Neotropical Flora or Neotropical flora? Berton 16:10, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

I can't figure out why you deleted the University of Connecticut link I added, especially when the one you substituted is far less informative. I've added another, hoping that the Department of Horticulture and Crop Science at Ohio State University is a reputable enough source! I've left your link but removed the one to Flora Europaea, as it provided virtually no information that is useful to this article. MrDarwin 01:13, 26 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Vinca minor
 * I'm going to have to insist on including the Ohio State University link as it does not have a regional bias and is quite informative; if there is any bias it is a horticultural one, and as this is a horticulturally important species, a horticultural reference is appropriate. I still strongly protest the Flora Europaea link, as it simply does not provide anything useful to the reader except a list of countries in which the species is native. MrDarwin 12:25, 26 August 2006 (UTC)
 * No time right now, but I'll be coming back to this article later. In the meantime I'll be happy to look for a better horticultural reference if you would be so kind as to point out the "several errors" in OSU's [hcs.osu.edu/pocketgardener/source/description/vi_minor.html Vinca minor] page. I'm scratching my head and trying to figure out just what you're referring to, and thought it would be nice to provide a reference that is easily accessible to the many Wikipedia user who don't have the luxury of a botanical or horticultural library at their fingertips. Isn't the ability to link to other websites supposed to be one of the great things about Wikipedia?
 * BTW "creeping myrtle" may have gotten you "only" 629 hits on a Google search (is that our arbiter for including common names now?) but if you do a Google search on [www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Myrtle+vinca&btnG=Google+Search vinca myrtle], you will get about 57,500 hits. My mistake, I forgot that just plain "myrtle" is quite a common name for this species. MrDarwin 05:07, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks for taking the time to explain your objections in more detail. Unfortunately your objections seem to be almost entirely of interpretation and wording, not of factual content. V. major most certainly does not have "elliptic" leaves. Please check your terminology and then take another look at the leaves of V. minor. Surely you are aware of the difficulty of providing accurate and objective descriptions when the language we use is subjective (even such terms as "elliptic" are open to interpretation) and the plants themselves do not necessarily fit into neat definitions. For example, how do you measure an individual "plant" of V. minor or any other clonally propagating species that forms large colonies? (In my experience the stems extend up to perhaps half a meter, usually less, then take root and start another plant.) And "variants" is a by-product of using a particular template to produce consistent descriptions for a large number of taxa, some of which may have "variants" that are not "cultivars" (click on "Features" in that reference for an explanation, where it explains quite clearly that "variants" means cultivars, varieties, hybrids, etc.).
 * As far as the ephemeral nature of links, yes that is certainly a problem and will continue to be, but I see that it hasn't stopped you from providing such links anyway. So again, your own actions argue against you. Regarding the comon names, I've already commented at length elsewhere. (And perhaps I'm overly suspicious but I find it just a bit too convenient that you deleted the links I added that documented the common names that you objected to.) The bottom line is that I shouldn't have to justify the inclusion of this link, especially when your objections are simply a bunch of quibbles, and I shouldn't have to worry about another editor following me around and immediately deleting the factual additions and changes I've made to articles. MrDarwin 23:48, 28 August 2006 (UTC)

This article states that R. vaseyi would have 7 stamens - strange as rhododendrons usually have 5 or 10 stamens. Do you know more about this? t.i.a, TeunSpaans 15:49, 26 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Rhododendron canadense

hi! thanks for advising me that it is not poison ivy. could you advise what species it is, and where is the appropriate place to put the photo? thanks! Meutia Chaerani 00:03, 27 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Not toxicodendron

Hi MPF, I'll change my footnotes to Harvard style, since that's what the page started with, but I'm a bit concerned that the Harvard style isn't being entirely used in this article. From what I understand (and I'm no expert), that style also includes a reference within the text [looks like this: "(Smith, 1776)" and then refers to the Smith entry for the book written in 1776, giving the full details of "The Wealth of Nations" or whatever]. The Blueberry article, as it stands, doesn't have the references within the text, so there's no way of knowing where each bit of information comes from. In the future, if someone wants to follow the information to its source, the reader won't be able to. If you know what bit of information links to what reference, could you add it? (This, incidentally, is why I prefer the numbered footnotes, because I think they're less intrusive in the text and more familiar to readers, but again, the article started out Harvard style so I should stick with it in my notes.)
 * Blueberries editing

As to the commercial links, these are to business associations, not individual businesses (I did note one individual business in Chile, but only because I couldn't find another source). The associations don't sell blueberries (certainly not online) and they do give information about them (recipes, health claims [claims which are regulated in the U.S.], industry information including history of the industry in their area) and anyone linking to them will understand where the information is coming from, so I don't think there's any practical harm done there, do you? It just seems to me that someone interested in more information, especially about blueberries as an industry, would find it useful to know about it in particular places.

As for section length, I guess I tend to lean toward shorter sections, but I see that the guidelines say several good sized paragraphs is pretty much ideal. My worry is when the gray paragraphs go much beyond that. It just seems to me that breaks make it easier on the reader. I'll look it over again myself, but if you think some should be taken out, go ahead. Best wishes, Noroton 18:15, 27 August 2006 (UTC)

With regard to my attempted edits to the Vinca minor article, what offended me much more than your dismissal and deletion of the links I provided was your immediate deletion of the common names I added to the article. You know me by now; you know I am not a fly-by-night anomymous vandal whose sole goal is adding nonsense to Wikipedia. I should not have to convince you that we benighted Americans really do have our own set of common names for plants that don't always correspond to the ones in use in England--this is one of the major reasons why I have stressed using botanical names for article titles with all common names redirecting to the botanical names. There is no international authority to arbitrate common names, although some Wikipedia seem to want Wikipedia to become that authority. The purpose of Wikipedia is not to promote one common name over another, as that is a POV; the purpose of Wikpedia is to provide factual and accurate information about the real world and an article should merely note which common names are in usage, where they are used, and perhaps which are more common than others if that can be determined. I cannot stress this enough: there is no such thing as a correct common name.
 * Notes on reversions, deletions, and editing in general

I note also that you reverted, without comment, the addition of Acer discolor to the List of Acer species article. (No, this was not my addition.) Why was this name deleted? Your dismissive reversion provides no clue to the person who added it, or to any other editors. (Perhaps because A. discolor Hort. ex Rehder--a name that persists in horticulture--is a synonym of A. oblongum? But according to the Flora of China there is indeed a valid species Acer discolor Maxim. that is endemic to China. I'm no authority on Acer so I'll have to leave it to somebody else to sort this out.) As an aside, I note that this list is completely unreferenced; where did this list (and the common names accompanying the botanical names), like so many other mysterious lists on Wikipedia, come from? I generally find such lists almost worse than useless, as they almost always have errors and there is rarely any indication as to where they came from, or whose taxonomy they are following, making them virtually impossible to proofread or correct.

This kind of reflexively dismissive editing of others' additions and edits, often with no comment or explanation, by more active editors is one of the things that will ultimately discourage many people with knowledge and expertise in one or more subjects from editing Wikipedia. I know that it has been very discouraging to me, and is one of the reasons why I have become frustrated and disillusioned with Wikipedia. I simply don't have the time to convince other editors, over and over, that I do occasionally know what I'm talking about. It would be a shame if Wikipedia came to represent, not necessarily the knowledge of those with the most expertise in a particular field, but of those with too much time on their hands to endlessly patrol and jealously guard hundreds of pet articles. I have encountered this tendency with Brya, and I have seen the same tendency in you; my interactions with both of you were among the reasons why I left Wikipedia for a time, and will probably leave it again. There are far better things to do with my time and expertise. MrDarwin 13:45, 28 August 2006 (UTC)

On February 4, 2004, you added something along the lines of this to Arctic Tern: "a chick banded at the Farne Islands, Northumberland in summer 1982, which reached Melbourne, Australia in October 1982, a sea journey of over 22,000 km in just three months from fledging."
 * Arctic Tern migration

Please help me, at a time convenient for you, by adding a source for that to the article or telling me where you got that information from so I can add it myself. You help is much appreciated. Thank you. Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 20:29, 31 August 2006 (UTC)


 * Thanks. But are those two Cramp references to the same page(s) in the same work? Or are they the same work but different pages? Miss Madeline | Talk to Madeline 23:25, 8 September 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for the plant identifications. Some questions about the Strelitzia reginae Image:DirkvdM bananaflower.jpg, though. Is the leaf in the background part of it? It loks like a bananaleaf to me and they're both of the order Zingiberales, but that is a bit vague. If not, do you know what it is? Also, you say the flower is cultivated. Is that because it cannot grow in the wild in Costa Rica? I found it at the edge of a field, but for that region that doesn't disprove that assumption (the field edges are often kept very nice and people there love flowers). Thanks. DirkvdM 19:02, 3 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Strelitzia reginae

I figured it out now. Here's the steps:
 * Cleaning up page histories


 * 1) Delete the page (radical, but if done quickly shouldn't be a problem)
 * 2) Reload the page, and use "view/restore edits"
 * 3) Select the boxes next those edits that are to be kept.
 * 4) Click on Restore

That's all! :) -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 11:11, 7 September 2006 (UTC)

Hi Michael, Sadly, I would like to inform you that the picture Bertholletia excelsa.jpg is a copyvio from the brazilian book Árvores Brasileiras' Lorenzi, H., Vol. 1, page 133, Editora Plantarum, 1992 Thank you. Berton 23:38, 15 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Brazil Nut
 * Hi Michael: Did you or Berton mean to tag commons:Image:Bertholletia_excelsa.jpg as a copyvio pursuant to the above comment? Perhaps I'm deficient in the higher thought processes this morning, but I don't see where this was done. Best wishes, Walter Siegmund (talk) 18:17, 16 September 2006 (UTC)

Hi MPF, Mind if I move this to commons? I'm writing a chapter pruning in a wikibook. -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 16:10, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Image:Pruning.png

I'm not going to touch it at the moment as I don't have time, but this article needs some major editing. Vitex and several other of the listed genera have been transferred to Lamiaceae, which article will have to be edited in tandem. Both articles should address the s.l. and s.s. (or sensu Cronquist & sensu APG II) concepts of the families. MrDarwin 13:35, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Verbenaceae

We can't claim "fair use" on images that don't meet Wikipedia:Fair use criteria. In short, there needs to be some justification for why this image cannot be replaced (and it isn't clear to me that it couldn't), and tl|Promotional should never be used on a picture of a plant -- plants don't release photos of themselves for wide distribution to promote their work. If there is some reason why this image cannot be replaced, use tl|fairusein with a full fair use rationale. Frankly, the best thing would be to just get a freely licensed image of this plant. Jkelly 16:14, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Image:Thuja sutchuenensis.jpg
 * Oh, well that changes things significantly. Please do make sure that this is made crystal clear on the image description page. Thanks. Jkelly 16:23, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
 * I think that you've made it clear why we would want to claim Fair use for the image. Thanks for clarifying. Jkelly 23:03, 21 September 2006 (UTC)

I am slightly confused by this. Why do plant author citations not have dates? Surely this is excluding useful information? Mgiganteus1 19:46, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Cyathea
 * I have made an effort to include every published name (or close enough) associated with the genus Cyathea. Considering the sheer number of synonyms, I think dates are very useful, especially since many taxa have been placed in several genera. I find your removal of these dates quite frustrating and counterproductive. To be honest, if you do remove all the dates I will lose interest in creating further Cyathea species pages, since I feel valuable information is being lost; the date is the second most basic piece of information associated with a binomial name.
 * Regarding Cyathea amintae, I am generally following Tree Ferns by Mark F. Large and John E. Braggins, and they seem to consider it a distinct species. Mgiganteus1 19:59, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks for your understanding. :-) Mgiganteus1 20:04, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Btw, when I use a mdash in the author citation, it is not because I do not know the author, but because the species has never been placed in the genus Cyathea in a published source AFAIK (it's been placed in one of its syonyms). Is there a different way I could indicate this? Mgiganteus1 20:12, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Do you suggest it be moved to Alsophila amintae then? At least at present it is somewhat consistent... Mgiganteus1 20:37, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Braggins and Large list it in their book under the section "Tree Ferns That Require Further Study". They write: "The following species are listed here because of the nomenclatural problems that would ensue if they were formally included in the genus Cyathea", although the nature of these problems is not stated. This applies to 11 species in total. They write "Cyathea x dryopteroides is known to be a hybrid between Alsophila amintae and A. bryophila". Mgiganteus1 21:00, 23 September 2006 (UTC)

Thank you for pointing out the reasons this image and text have been removed... for the second time! I am not however the website owner of either the TopiaryArtDesigns.com website nor the charity website for the protection of endangered Asian elephants: elephantfamily.org - I do however know for a fact as a member of the European Box and Topiary Society that the gentleman I refer to: Steve Manning is the ONLY professional topiary artist and sculpture in the UK and renowned in the art by all in the pertinent societies and organisations. He has also won 3 Gold medals at Chelsea as well as numerous other awards and featured on many TV programmes including Blue Peter! If the subject is Topiary and sub headings: Topiary in the 20th Century and Topiary in Europe... How can Steve Manning NOT be included. Another note of interest may be that it is now the 21st Century and topiary has become increasingly popular and also metamorphosised from the traditional concept of it being grown as solely Box! Steve Manning's website may offer services but it also contains a large gallery of images... all of Topiary! ElephantFamily.org is NOT a commercial website.... It is a charity and the famous Elephant Family as featured on the front cover of LIFE magazine was created by Steve Manning for them. I fail to see why my entries have repeatedly been removed and until this evening, without notification! The copyright tag may appear easy to use for some others... but I only figured out where to put it and how it should read today and then only by example from another image placed there by another person! Thanks - Neil J BradfordNeilbradford 19:46, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
 * My Links are Relevant and NOT Commercial as were my edits, repeatedly removed!

Thanks for catching my mis-categorization of that! Keep up the good work and happy editing! Katr67 22:18, 25 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Douglas-fir


 * Yep, I see what's going on with the subcat. I moved the project tag. I wouldn't have caught that either, doh! I'm an amateur naturalist, but I had better stick to Oregon communities here on Wikipedia and leave the taxonomy alone :) Katr67 23:20, 25 September 2006 (UTC)

Hi MPF. What do you think of the WP:FN style footnotes [en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Garry_Oak&diff=77924524&oldid=77842556]? I've been using them on non-plant articles, but found myself adding one to Garry Oak this morning. The recommendation is to place them after punctuation, so it does not address that concern of yours. Best wishes, Walter Siegmund (talk) 16:35, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Footnotes
 * Hi Walter - must admit, I've never cared for them because they're so difficult to work out how to make for anyone who doesn't have a postdoc degree in computing; I've still not worked them out after two years, so I can only wonder how daunting they must be to a new editor - they must put off a lot of potential contributors from joining wikipedia. Not sure if that's what you're asking about, though! - MPF 17:46, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Footnotes have been improved and are easier to use now, I think. Mostly, I didn't want you to think that I was going to start adding footnotes to tree articles without discussion. BTW, Commons has Commons:WikiProject Tree of Life that I just joined (separate from WP:TOL). Walter Siegmund (talk) 16:02, 1 October 2006 (UTC)

Hi. How're things? Ever since I found that article, I have been wondering what to do with it. Maybe in 10 years I could make a comprehensive, well-referenced list, but there will be a few thousand species. One major issue is the "Caribbean Basin" - I have interpreted it narrowly, as "Insular Caribbean" (plus Bahamas, etc.) because including everything with a distribution that touches on the Caribbean would be insanely difficult. But if so, what to name it? Anyway, I'm glad you showed up on what is likely to be the most difficult article in WP, as far as I am concerned. Guettarda 19:10, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Trees of the Caribbean Basin
 * "Trees of the Caribbean" might be best, and mention in the intro that it includes the Bahamas. Wouldn't hurt to include the Florida Keys (I'd be surprised if there were more than a couple species found in the Keys which were not found further south).  It would be most useful if we could add distributions eventually as well.  Guettarda 23:07, 26 September 2006 (UTC)

Howdy! Good to meet you, even if regarding a matter on which we might have a minor disagreement... I've reverted your merger of pine nut oil into pine nut, and popped a tl|mergeto and tl|mergefrom tag onto the respective articles, to follow normal procedure when merging articles. Personally, I disagree with the merger, but let's see what consensus says.
 * Merging Pine nut oil

On less contentious matters, I'm very much interesting in plants that can, but are usually not, used as food sources. I wonder if there might be some overlap in our interests, and room for a bit of collaboration somehow? Waitak 01:07, 27 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Looks a lot better now, thanks! One small point, it looks decidedly odd, being mainly about Russian (European/Asian) uses, yet written in American spellings - it would read better with 'flavour', etc., as per the manual of style area relevance guidelines - MPF 19:45, 30 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks! If it were about a region where they speak English and use British spelling, I could see the point, but I guess I don't see any reason to prefer either American or British spelling given a focus on Russia, where they don't speak English at all! It's not the case, after all, that American spellings are used in the US, and British spellings everywhere else... I'd see the "use the dialect of the first significant contributor" rule as being the operative one in a case like this.
 * In any case, it's been nice interacting with you folks. Hope to bump into you again sometime! One of the things I love about WP is discovering these little communities tucked into all sorts of interesting nooks and crannies. Waitak 02:53, 1 October 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for picking me up on that mate - adnd going the extra mile (kilometer) to fix it. Perhaps I will take a picture of the blossoms when they appear. See you around, Dfrg.m1 05:47, 27 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Elms

Thanks for moving that to Populus tremuloides. I wasn't personally certain it was species-specific (maybe they aren't) and planned to do more reading and get more sources. As for the NYT, sometimes you get an interstitial ad these days and sometimes you don't. --Dhartung | Talk 21:07, 27 September 2006 (UTC)
 * Aspen dieback

Thanks for the heads up re: changes to Asclepiadaceae. I've fixed it and removed the vandalism by Hummerh2 MidgleyDJ 06:12, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Asclepiadaceae

Still going down that road, MPF? :o) So let's let the other shoe drop: "sago palm" gets about 33,000 hits vs. the ca. 1000 for "sago cycad". I still say it's not Wikipedia's place to impose a "correct" common name, especially when deciding who or what determines what is "correct" opens such a messy can of worms. MrDarwin 14:57, 2 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Cycas revoluta

Hi MPF: I have a question why you deleted the pictures from the Ohio Buckeye page. Although I do not want to take it personal but I am considering this action is very rude. It is because:
 * Ohio Buckeye and pictures
 * You deleted them without explaining to people who put a lot affords and energy to create them know what was going on. As a result, you may left some articles which link to these pictures incomplete.  I am wondering if this action of yours is allowed in wiki, who would care to work and help wikipedia.  For god's sake, send a note or a message to creators or posters of those articles or pictures and let them know what was going on.  Therefore, they can have a chance to explain their work.  Next time, please do not delete things without letting them know. Thank you very much.
 * Just in case if you have a problem with copyright. I provided the link to the original web site, which was created for educational purposes. I even copy the quote about the copyright from that web site to the pictures that I posted there.  In case, you did not get it.  Here is the link [www.cas.vanderbilt.edu/bioimages/terms-of-use.htm].

What this means in everyday terms: 1. You can use these images for most educational and personal purposes. 2. If you want to use the images commercially, contact the copyright owner. 3. If you use these images on the web, credit the copyright owner and link to the Bioimages site  (bioimages.vanderbilt.edu/).


 * If I understand the above term correctly, it means that they allow pictures posted on that web site to be used for fair use, or in wikipedia.


 * The reason that I posted the Image:Ohio buckeye leaves.jpg there because I think that people should also know what Ohio buckeye leaves look like. You cannot see leaves from the existing pictures.  The same also can be explained to buckeye nuts and fruits.  From the existing pictures, I am wondering how much people can learn about buckeye trees.  I think if they find a buckeye tree on their way home, they cannot even tell what it is from the current pictures that were put on the web.
 * Also, the leaves and nuts (not the whole trees) are often used as the symbols of Ohio State University anyway. I do not see any reason why not to put these pictures in the Ohio Buckeye tree wiki webpage.


 * I am sorry, if the pictures that I posted there are not the same Ohio buckeye species that is mentioned on the page.

Thank you very much. --Ohho 06:24, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
 * If you have any problem or question besides the above explanation, please feel free to contact me we can discuss the issue.


 * Hi MPF: Cool!  If it is the case, I am fine with it.  I now understand. Thank you for your explanation.   You may delete them.   However, the Image:Aesculus glabra seeds.jpg is different story.  Thanks.  --17:08, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Thank you very much. I appreciate your help & work. You, Rock! 8-) --Ohho 06:32, 4 October 2006 (UTC)

... such as English Walnut can't be inaccurate, because they're "common names", as opposed to scientific names. Americans aren't incorrectly using the term: "English Walnut" simply means Juglans regia when spoken by American speakers (it's even in the dictionary, so definitely not "incorrect", just "common to this region''.
 * Common names...

Your continual insistence that Americans speak "improper English" or use words "improperly" is getting a bit tired. "The Queen's English" is not qualitatively superior to any other dialect, it's just one of many, actually spoken by a minority. Reverting now.

Wikipedia's plant articles are marked everywhere by your peculiar insistence on common names as having taxonomic importance (to be honest I giggle every time I read articles like Poison Ivy or Boston Ivy). While I heartily agree with you that common names should as a rule not be used as article titles because of the confusion caused by the various local names, it really isn't that one thing is correct and the other isn't, which is part of why the scientific names are so important. -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 14:09, 4 October 2006 (UTC)


 * Insisting that the use of an English word in one region is proper, while any alternate use in another improper is POV (NPOV is not "National Point Of View"). Noting that something is called by another name in this region or that is NOPV (in the wikipedian sense), but claiming that it is "incorrectly" called that is definitely POV. Persistently pointing out that American English is some sort of ignorant bastardization is not only POV but un-WP:CIVIL as well, if you stop to think for a moment. You've been edit warring along these lines for months now, and I just really don't get it.


 * Just a note of interest: the reason it's called English Walnut is probably because it was brought from England with the settlers, who had previously just called it "Walnut", and now had to differentiate it from the native species (which, in my POV, is an awful weed). -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 14:55, 4 October 2006 (UTC)


 * I'm not saying that you're doing this to cause offence (I'd like to think I know you well enough to say confidently that you'd never edit in bad faith), but a lot of the articles you edit have phrases like:
 * ...confusingly called X in Y region...


 * ...incorrectly called X in Y region...
 * ...incorrectly called X when it's not even closely related to Z (with Z being a similar name or a name that's part of X)...
 * E.g.: Why is "Boxelder" confusing? Because it contains the word "elder"? Should "barnacle" be renamed because it has nothing to do with barns? Do we need to point out that maples have nothing to do with maps
 * The big throw-down you had with MrDarwin over Vinca minor was along the same lines: from what I gather, you kept removing some of the common names (which are commonly used) because they weren't the "proper European(=English English) name", and it's a European plant, so the Americans shouldn't be allowed to call it what they feel like calling it.


 * While there may be some movements afoot to "taxonomize" common names, pushing for this on wikipedia is just a really bad idea: in practice, they're just local names (I think I mentioned to you once that some flora use the term "country name" instead, which has a nice ring to it IMO). It's kind of like the Brya-putting-italics-on-the-higher-taxa thing... he might be right as far as the XYZ code goes, but common (as in dominant) practice generally fits better with NPOV than does any "correcting body", if you see what I mean. -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 15:43, 4 October 2006 (UTC)


 * Sorry, didn't mean this to become some sort of flame war... I wasn't aware that our friend was watching my page. Again, I know you don't mean it that way, but that's how it makes the pages look when every common name is pointed to as "misleading" or "improper". I wasn't trying to cause you to have unneccessary wikistress :). -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 11:13, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
 * My apologies to both of you, I shouldn't have meddled and should have let MPF and SB Johnny work this one out for themselves. It's no secret that I strongly disagree with MPF on the subject of common names and how they should be treated within Wikipedia articles, and when such discussion come up I tend to fly off the handle. MrDarwin 15:28, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
 * No biggie... I know you were just trying to be helpful, but flying off the handle isn't always very helpful ;-) -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 15:40, 6 October 2006 (UTC)
 * (reset tabs) Well, here's the thing: when you say "now read as though we are being instructed to use American names for our own species" (emphasis mine), it sort of points right at the problem. They're not your plants, they're just plants (although in both those examples, I do happen to own a Persian/English walnut (BTW, see b:Cookbook:Walnuts!), as well as some vinca minor (we call it "periwinkle" in Pennsylvania).
 * I think it would be fine and appropriate for articles to read:
 * Common name (Genus species, also known as Other common name in Region)
 * But not:
 * Common name (Genus species, improperly referred to as Other common name in Region)
 * You see where I'm going? The first version is definitely NPOV, the second isn't. -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 15:40, 6 October 2006 (UTC)

Hello MPF, As you have been so helpful before with my bird photos, I was wondering if you could make a little confirmation about few recent uploads.
 * Question, bird identification

I was photographing some migration flocks of barnacle geese (will upload those after sorting the pictures), I saw rather unusual behaviour by nearby crows. There seemed to be unusual chaos in nearby crows nest and I noticed a bird that certainly did not belong to the crow flock.

Although I am 90% sure that the "odd bird" was sparrowhawk, could you please verify that? I have not yet linked the pictures in any articles for fear of providing false information. The pictures I am wondering about are these:

Image:AccipiterNisusFlightB.jpg|A? Image:AccipiterNisusFlightA.jpg|B? Image:AccipiterNisusDuelB.jpg|C? Image:AccipiterNisusDuelA.jpg|D?

Many thanks in advance Thermos 13:44, 8 October 2006 (UTC)


 * Thank you MPF for confirmation. I appreciate that. Sounds that you had quite a day yourself too. Much more than I could see... --Thermos 18:25, 8 October 2006 (UTC)

Image:NamadgiTree.jpg|thumb|What is it?
 * Identification

Hi, MPF I was wondering, as you did such a good job at identifying my immature Elm seeds - could you identify this, it looks like a gum tree but I'm not sure. Thanks, Dfrg.msc 1. 23:53, 4 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks MPF! I'd be lost without you. And sorry for he late reply. Dfrg.msc 1 . 22:52, 8 October 2006 (UTC)

Since you're good at this, I was wondering if you could have a look at b:A_Wikimanual_of_Gardening/Juglans_nigra|A_Wikimanual_of_Gardening/Juglans_nigra (wikibooks), and figure out why the templates there make whitespaces? There's actually 2 templates making trouble on that particular page (b:Template:Treebox and b:Template:Weedbox), both of which use a less complicated language in comparison with the taxoboxes here... though perhaps the lack of complication is the problem? (There is a third as well, (b:Template:Weedcontrol), but this one doesn't seem to cause formatting problems). The pages there came about because, if you'll remember, I tend to be a how-to oriented person, so I've been developing that sort of material on the wb side.
 * More template questions

One other template I'm wondering about is {tl|Wmog}, which is an interwiki linking template here on wikipedia. Have a look at Ailanthus altissima under the "control" section... I had transwikied the article and made the chapter b:A_Wikimanual_of_Gardening/Ailanthus altissima|A_Wikimanual_of_Gardening/Ailanthus altissima, and tried to leave the link where the how-to information was formerly found (just enough there to violate the MOS, but not nearly enough there to be actually useful). Can you think of a way to make that template appear next to the text, rather than below it (and making the whitespace)? I suppose I could just put it at the bottom with the commons link, but the idea was to leave a link for whomever had written the how-to in the first place, so they won't assume it was a case of simple how-to-deletionism. -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 11:24, 5 October 2006 (UTC)

Hi MPF, it seems that you added the sentence Growth in Britain is very fast, with the tallest tree, at Benmore in southwest Scotland, reaching 54m at age 150 years (Tree register of the British Isles), and several others from 50-53m tall in the Sequoiadendron article. I am the webmaster of a Dutch site about Sequoiadendron in Belgium and the Netherlands ([users.telenet.be/sequoiadendron/nl/loc/belgienederland.html], [users.telenet.be/sequoiadendron/benmore.html]) and received comments on the height 54m you mentioned and I took over (as I have no access to the British tree register myself). It seems that the register still mentions 51m as the record height. Could you check if the heighest redwood in Benmore is 51 or 54 m? Thanks, Tbc2 13:30, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Redwoods in Benmore Botanic Garden

You edited the Toxicodendron article to state that the genus Rhus is paraphyletic. Do you have a reference for this? I have one abstract that indicates Rhus is paraphyletic with respect to Lobadium, but nothing that indicating it is paraphyletic with respect to Toxicodendron. Please let me know your source--I realize this also may be something that has changed since you added the edit, but I would like to clean up that particular article a bit. Thanks, KP Botany 15:29, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Toxicodendron question

I could not find the question of Rhus being paraphyletic in the absence of Toxicodendron, so I removed this, because in addition, I think until someone can find a specific verifiable reference on this case, it should be left without questioning its validity as a clade, in particular because there is at least one credible source that lists the question as  whether or not Rhus is monophyletic in the absence of Lobadium, but does not question Rhus in the absence of Toxicodendron. I will post a link to this abstract tomorrow or Monday, although I believe the lead author is Quinn, so it is searchable with the genera and the author. I also believe that I have read that Toxicodendron is monophyletic. This was what I was hoping to find before editing the article, as this comment concerned me, questioning the monophyly of Rhus in the absence of Toxicodendron. However, because of the commentary on Rhus's monophyly being in question only in light of the absence of Lobadium, I felt it important to make this one point in the article as it stands now, until I can find a reliable source on Toxicodendron and elaborate on the issue.
 * Juglans and Toxicodendron

I agree with keeping the Toxicodendron refernces under Rhus, as I collect old florals and tend to look under Rhus first. If you find your original reference, let me know what it is, whether or not someone finds something more current. I'm simply trying to make the content more robust for the time being, under a dynamic science whose rate of change is impossible for books.

On the Juglans, I think it best to go with the beaked hickory (?) subsumed in the Carya, as it is in the Kew and the IPNI lists because the only scientists currently questioning this placement are Chinese scientists, while English-speaking resources list it the other way. I suspect the Chinese research would fall under the NOR criteria for Wikipedia. I personally think that when the molecular phylogenetics are done on the species it may show the Chinese scientists to be correct, because of its evolutionary isolation and the length of this isolation, however, the best and most robust verifiable sources in English for this species, list it as part of Carya. This is one of those issues that does not lend itself, in its detail, and the reasons behind it, to an encyclopediac treatment, without international agreement, or at least some primary or secondary sources outside of China in agreement with the original research of the Chinese authors on this tree.

KP Botany 01:26, 6 October 2006 (UTC)

Hi... that's a bit better, but what would you think of putting the american measures in parentheses instead? The ref usage (at least on my browser) makes it look like footnotes (which I suppose they are footnotes :).)
 * feet and meters

Like you, I much prefer the metric system, but believe it or not a lot of american readers really can't visualise it. Having them in parenthesis next to the metrics (and I heartily agree that it's the American measurements that should be parenthesized, not the other way around) might have the added benefit of educating american readers (i.e., so they could get a feel for "30 cm" ~ "(1 foot)").

Sound good? -- SB_Johnny |talk|books 11:46, 7 October 2006 (UTC)

I don't know if the matter would interest you, but thought comments regarding an article split going on at Red Deer may be interesting and any feedback would be appreciated there. I was working on getting Red Deer to featured level, but am now inclined to split the article into Red Deer and "Elk (animal)" or something along those lines. The latest discussion on the matter is at Talk:Red_Deer#Elk and any thoughts you have would be good to hear. Thanks.--MONGO 05:18, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Comments welcomed


 * Thanks for the contribution to the Red Deer discussion. Not sure what to do with the article at this point. I wanted to show you this DNA study about Red Deer subspecies issues, looking also at the conclusion of the researchers. It sure would be nice if the biologists would come forward and reach some consensus on the number of subspecies and as to whether there are actually two speices or just one, but as User:Wsiegmund has pointed out to me, the DNA research may be too new for others to have rendered an opinion publically yet. Anyway, here's the link if you're interested. Thanks again. [www.wzw.tum.de/wildbio/paper/cerphyl.pdf#search=%22Barbary%20red%20deer%22]. --MONGO 20:02, 18 October 2006 (UTC)

Hello, I have a question for you. I've just discovered Wikispecies and found that in some cases it has much greater detail than we have here. Is there a way that we can interlink species/genus/etc. articles to Wikispecies the way Wiktionary has a box template that directs back to the comparable article at Wikipedia? Badagnani 03:25, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Question about Wikispecies

I've moved the article, again, to start an entirely new article titled Floral symmetry. The old article was little more than a dictionary definition and I think discussion under a somewhat broader heading is more appropriate for an encyclopedia, and there are now several articles linking and redirecting to it (including several that used to redirect to Petal). I'd like to see this article expanded a bit, so feel free if you're so inclined. MrDarwin 19:05, 20 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Actinomorphous/Actinomorphic flower

I missed the list of apple cultivars because it was not under the See also heading, so I have put it there as well. Pink Lady is not on this list, so I shall go add it there. Tabletop 09:46, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Apple cultivars

Hi! As a member of the WikiProject Plants you might be interested in supporting the nomination of Cactus for Article Improvement Drive. I honestly think that there is an underrepresentation of plants among featured articles. This is our chance! If you agree, you can support the nomination at the Wikipedia:Article_Creation_and_Improvement_Drive page. --Chino 07:20, 23 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Cactus AID nomination

Hi Michael, please, do you might identify the plant on Rubiaceae page referred as Pentas lanceolata, I think (like User:SriniG) that is an Ixora species, see talk Rubiaceae. Berton 18:37, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Image on Rubiaceae page

Hi. I posted a different version at commons. Care to have a look (and comment)? Lycaon 19:42, 24 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Amphipod anatomy image at commons

I was just wondering why you changed the tense for the califonia redwood tree. - emerson7 02:54, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
 * California Redwood

I'm planning on reverting your 13th September edit to this article, as it is very awkwardly worded and downplays the fact that the third "common" name is the only one in common usage. Before I do so, however, I wanted to know why you made the changes you did. Thank you for your time. Moongate 21:11, 29 October 2006 (UTC)
 * Bermuda cedar

Hi this is Michael in the "Sonoran Desert". I'll do my best, and I am still learning. You probably know that I have been doing, fauna,flora, avifauna, and tees.(And "Natural history of") I just now have gone thru a lot of Ontario, "What links here", and Ontario is in the Unique position of being southerly, East of Michigan. Sooo... the task is intriquing, and complicated, area wise. The most interesting thing I learned about Ontario, was the Oak Ridges Moraine. Anyhow, thanks. Michael,out in the desert..Mmcannis 10:52, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Categories, etc.

I noticed you were the top edit on the Conocarpus page and had added the statement that Conocarpus erecta was the only species in the genus. I believe this to be incorrect (there is a Somali/Yemeni species, Conocarpus lancifolius, quite different from Anogeissus latifolia) but would like to know what reference your information comes from before I edit. thehappysmith 12:24, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Conocarpus

Thanks for the help on getting that Bonsai photo fixed, I was having a lot of problems with that. You seam to know what you are doing; so I may ask you for help some time if I have any more problems. P.S. I am also a "cereal" killer! Ha-ha -Grosscha 22:45, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
 * Thanks MPF