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Analysis of Hoser species

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I was interested in your check on Hoser's species at the RFC. The three species accepted by the Reptile Database were described in 1998 (x2), and 2000, which is well he established the Australasian Journal of Herpetology (although his work was being criticized as far back as 1999). If it would fairly simple for you to produce, I'm curious to see a breakdown of the number of Hoser's species description by year. Plantdrew (talk) 01:28, 13 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

He has a total number of over 2400 registered taxa (all ranks) published in 319 papers (from ZooBank), all self-published from 2009 onwards:
  • 1998 (2)
  • 2000 (2)
  • 2001 (1)
  • 2002 (2)
  • 2003 (5)
  • 2004 (1)
  • 2005 (1)
  • 2009 (6)
  • 2012 (45)
  • 2013 (34)
  • 2014 (15)
  • 2015 (18)
  • 2016 (26)
  • 2017 (8)
  • 2018 (24)
  • 2019 (16)
  • 2020 (35)
  • 2021 (2)
  • 2022 (34)
  • 2023 (26)
  • 2024 (16)
The 1338 individual species also published by year:
  • 1998 (7)
  • 2000 (10)
  • 2001 (3)
  • 2002 (6)
  • 2003 (10)
  • 2004 (6)
  • 2005 (1)
  • 2009 (13)
  • 2012 (28)
  • 2013 (54)
  • 2014 (36)
  • 2015 (46)
  • 2016 (82)
  • 2017 (49)
  • 2018 (90)
  • 2019 (107)
  • 2020 (256)
  • 2021 (75)
  • 2022 (157)
  • 2023 (148)
  • 2024 (154)
Loopy30 (talk) 03:22, 13 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. As I suspected, the species accepted by The Reptile Database are from the earliest years of Hoser's publications, and he was not especially prolific in naming species in those years. The paucity of publications between 2006 and 2011 also speaks to Hoser's turning from doing poor work in sources that weren't self-published to outright self-publication. Plantdrew (talk) 02:15, 16 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, and even those few early (accepted) names are tainted with the suspicions/accusations that he was aware of another researcher's works and rushed to publish first in order to "scoop" the name.
He is not respected in academic herpetology circles (see here for example). Sigh. Loopy30 (talk) 15:00, 16 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

White Canadians vs European Canadians

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I know you've discussed this before Talk:European_Canadians#"European Canadians" is not limited to those who specifically identify European ethnic origins in the census. See the edit that assumes all white people are European and that all Europeans are white diff. Moxy🍁 01:01, 28 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Moxy, It has been difficult to keep the article changes sourced and coherent when no-one (in academia, government policy, newspapers or other publications) actually uses the term. As a dog whistle though, it does appear to attract some rabid POV-pushing editors to the page. I have commented further at the discussion page for the proposed move. Loopy30 (talk) 20:13, 29 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

ArbCom 2024 Elections voter message

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Drosera albonotata

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Hi Loopy30, thanks for the work you do finding and adding suitable images to articles. I wondered if you have some sort of slick tooling setup for bringing images across to Commons or whether you do it manually? If the former, could I ask you to work your magic on this image please for the above article? It does a really good job of illustrating the main distinguishing characteristics of this species. If it's a manual job for you too, please don't go to any trouble; let me know and I'll do it myself :) Thank you! YFB ¿ 20:03, 25 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Hi YFB, while automated processes to upload files from Flickr do exist (eg. see Commons:Flickr2Commons), I choose to manually upload images from iNaturalist so that I can search for the authors name in my "Files uploaded". This helps me when I send them a thank you note after I use one of their images on Wikipedia. The problem with this particular image set is that it is hosted with an older license (CC-BY-2.0) that is not compatible with the Commons Upload Wizard. The file I used on the article was cropped from an existing Commons file that had already passed the licence review in 2022. Loopy30 (talk) 03:50, 26 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Aahh, OK - that's a helpful explanation. Thank you. YFB Âż 20:05, 26 November 2024 (UTC)[reply]