Fun with scientific names
- Silurus
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Fun with scientific names
If you think scientific names are always boring and unpronounceable, look again.
This is not in there, but a new plant genus from New Zealand has just been named <i>Hebejeebie</i>.
This is not in there, but a new plant genus from New Zealand has just been named <i>Hebejeebie</i>.
- König Löwe
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- Bathos
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- Jools
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Always liked abedefduf for Damselfish. They should also run a page for the most unpronouncable names...
Jools
Jools
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- Sid Guppy
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I've got a weakness for things like
Hara hara
Chaca chaca
Conta conta
Pipa pipa
Vimba vimba
Bombina bombina
try a few of these on the tune of "hare krishna" ; it'll sound really new age, and nobody will know you're just worshipping the god of fishes and unspeakable weird ugly frogs
Hara hara
Chaca chaca
Conta conta
Pipa pipa
Vimba vimba
Bombina bombina
try a few of these on the tune of "hare krishna" ; it'll sound really new age, and nobody will know you're just worshipping the god of fishes and unspeakable weird ugly frogs
Plan B should not automatically be twice as much explosives as Plan A
- Dinyar
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I was intrigued to learn recently that the ICBN (botanical) forbids genus names from being used as species names.
I'm also intrigued by the fact that so many of these doubled catfish names are for Indian fish (Chaca, Hara, Conta, Rita, Batasio, Bagarius, Gagata, Nangra, Nandus, etc.). Silurus, can you enlighten us?
OK, I just found an answer to my own question. Almost all these species were described by Hamilton in 1822! Didn't look up Hamilton's given name, but let me take a guess...
Dinyar
I'm also intrigued by the fact that so many of these doubled catfish names are for Indian fish (Chaca, Hara, Conta, Rita, Batasio, Bagarius, Gagata, Nangra, Nandus, etc.). Silurus, can you enlighten us?
OK, I just found an answer to my own question. Almost all these species were described by Hamilton in 1822! Didn't look up Hamilton's given name, but let me take a guess...
Dinyar
- Silurus
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- Dinyar
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Check out this post in the Asian forum:Silurus wrote:These are all Indian names for the catfishes (usually in Bengali). Hamilton described them in different genera initially, but Bleeker later gave them the same generic names as the species names (such names are called tautonyms, BTW).
http://www.forum.planetcatfish.com/viewtopic.php?t=1380
Dinyar