| Birders argue over plan to change dozens of bird names npr.org
 
 Say goodbye to Bachman’s Sparrow, Scott’s Oriole and Townsend’s  Warbler. Those three birds are among a half-dozen that will get renamed  first under a plan by the American Ornithological Society to do away  with common bird names that honor people.
 
 But whether or not the society will keep going after that, and get rid of all eponymous bird names, remains to be seen.
 
 Last year, the society  announced  a plan to do just that. The goal was to rename over a hundred North and  South American birds, to purge bird names of links to racism and  colonialism without having to engage in contentious and time-consuming  debates about the morality of every historical figure that had ever been  honored in a bird’s common name.
 
 The sweeping move, however, surprised and upset many birders and ornithologists.
 
 This week, opponents and proponents will get to have their say at the society’s annual  meeting in Colorado, which features a forum on Thursday to discuss the bird renaming plan.
 
 “I cannot predict what is going to happen there,” says  Kenn Kaufman, an author of field guides and a fellow of the society.
 
 He’s  seen his fair share of birding controversies, like when birders debated  whether they had to actually see a bird or just hear its call in order  to add it to their birding life list.
 
 This controversy, though, is in its own league, says Kaufman.
 
 “Something  at this scale, I don’t think has ever happened before,” he says. “The  decision was put out there, there was a very strong reaction in some  quarters, and so the initial decision might wind up being altered.”
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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