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I
like to know the names of things. Whether it's the weed
that leaves flat sticky seeds on my socks or the little
worms that eat holes through my books, it drives me crazy
if I don't know their names. And though I often settle
for the common name, it's the scientific one that really
catches my fancy. The long-jawed, spiny-legged, humpbacked
spider is great but Tetragnathus quasimodo is better.
For the biologist and naturalist, the scientific name
describes not just the thing itself, but places it in
the larger context of relationships to other organisms.
With the genus and species name the spider can be placed
in its proper order on the library shelf of life. Taxonomy,
the study of naming and classifying organisms, is like
the Dewey Decimal system for living things. And in Hawaii,
taxonomy is put to the test.

Photo
by Bill Mull |

Photo
by Bill Mull |
| Two
closely related but obviously different species of
Caconemobius crickets. |
Hawaii
has many groups of plants and animals that are very closely
related genetically. And while it may be rather easy to
lump similar things together at the genus level, it can
get very muddled when it comes to splitting the species.
It is especially difficult with the groups that contain
an incredible variety of form, behavior, and habitat among
types which are the descendents of just a few ancestral
colonizers. Dr. Ken Kaneshiro thinks that from perhaps
one ancestral pomace fly founder, the hawaiian Drosophila
have evolved more than five hundred species, each requiring
a name. Daniel Otte says that maybe a thousand species
of crickets derived from a handful of chirping colonizers.
He names many of them in his book, The Crickets of
Hawaii (The Orthopterists' Society, 1994) with the
place name of their locale like Trigondium kau. Often,
different kinds of creatures or plants all lumped together
as a single species by one taxonomist get split up into
several different species by another. This sort of thing
has happened in the plant world fairly often. A group
of plants in Hawaii from the African violet family is
particularly troublesome for the name givers.

Photo
by Bill Mull |

Photo
by Bill Mull |
| Two
of an estimated 1000 species of Hawaiian Drosophila
pomace flies, many of which are undescribed and unnamed. |
Cyrtandra
are generally found in moist and wet forest areas on the
islands. They range from herbs to small trees. Usually
they have a soft fuzzy surface on the leaves. In the Manual
of the Flowering Plants of Hawaii, by Herbst, Wagner,
and Sohmer (University of Hawaii Press, 1990) the authors
describe and name 53 species in the Cyrtandra genus. As
their two volume book, considered the standard of taxonomy
for Hawaii's plants, went to press, another botanist,
St. John published 10 papers totaling 61 pages describing
252 new species of Cyrtandra. The difference here is not
the discovery of new and different kinds of Cyrtandra,
the difference is how the botanists define the exact limits
of the species. What the lumper calls a subspecies or
a hybrid, the splitter calls a different species. This
is unsettling for those of us obsessed with proper names.
How can I possibly discern whether it is Cyrtandra cornuta
or Cyrtandra calpidicarpa at my feet, when the experts
can't decide?
For
birdwatchers in Hawaii, who keep lists of the birds they've
seen, these taxonomic tangles have been welcome. Over
the years some of our native birds who have close relatives
from island to island that were lumped as one species
have been split asunder. Suddenly, in a place known for
bird extinction, we have new species on paper. The Hawaiian
honeycreepers just last year went through a split.
The
honeycreepers are one of Hawaii's great treasures. Originating
from a finch like seed-eating ancestor, these kamaainas
are one of the bird world's best examples of evolutionary
process. Adapting to exploit different habitats and food
sources, the honeycreepers most noticeable changes are
their beaks. From nimble insect gleaning forceps, to long
decurved nectar gatherers, to powerful seed crunchers,
to a parrotbill, and the incredible combo prybar/woodpecker
beak of the Big Island's Akiapolaau, these creatures have
obvious changes that make it easy for taxonomists to describe
and split. Indeed, much of the taxonomy in Hawaii has
been what is called descriptive taxonomy. The species
are divided up based upon physical similarities and differences.
Up until last year, the Amakihi on Kauai, Oahu, Maui nui,
and Hawaii were considered one species with different
subspecies from each island. Now, based upon modern genetic
and mitochondrial DNA evidence, the American Ornithologist's
Union has split up Hemignathus virens into three species:
on Kauai--H. kauaiensis, on Oahu-H. chloris, and on Maui
nui and Hawaii Island-Hemignathus virens. Without raising
a pair of binoculars to my eyes, I now have two more birds
on my Hawaii birdlist.

Photo
by Jack Jeffrey
Hawaii
Amakihi Hemignatus virens virens in Mamane.
|

Photo
by Jack Jeffrey
Maui
Amakihi Hemignathus virens wilsoni Ohia-lehua.
|

Photo
by Jack Jeffrey
Kauai
Amakihi Hemignathus stejnegeri in Lobelia.
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This
all begs the question of what exactly is a species? And
how valid is St. John the Splitter's taxonomy next to
Wagner the Lumper's? I often think of evolution as something
that has happened in the past. But it is not. It is an
ongoing movement of variation amidst similarity made evident
by the name calling of modern science.
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