Quote:
Originally Posted by RoyalOrchids
So again, what will you do with your tags? Will you reject/accept these changes all together, or will you pick and choose those with which you agree? Which re-classifications will you accept? Did you accept the last changes? If not, do we take action or protest in some way? Do nothing?
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It is a hard question to answer, Royal! Anyway, I can say that I am not changing my tags when the plants involved are well-known plants in the whole world, like Laelias, Sophros and Cattleyas, Maxillarias, Oncidiums. It is not wrong and you cannot be punished in a show or judging if you use Cattleya bicolor instead of Cattleya dichroma as they want now. Both are synonyms and perfectly acceptable.
I am not changing my tags because I am sure these names are going to change again and again, based on new DNA studies or new methods or whatever. Less than a decade ago the large flowered Laelias were Laelias, became Sophronitis, then Hadrolaelias, then Brasilaelias and now Cattleyas. It is just a matter of time for them to become Brassavolas for the lumpers or something else for the splitters.
Researchers don't give a dime for us orchid lovers and we don't have how to protest. They don’t hear any of our arguments because in their opinion, once we are not scientists, our opinions are just this, opinions of people who collect plants. They believe they are making the most advanced science and enlarging the human understanding by using these still very questionable DNA studies forgetting that these techniques and methods are still very new and need time to mature. In my humble opinion, the best way in our days would be to combine morphology and DNA analysis to provide a more stable nomenclature. Unfortunately, they elected DNA sequencing as the new god for these problems of elucidating relationship between groups of plants and simply forgot the morphology. They simply discarded this important tool as if it were completely useless. I think that if we say the word 'Morphology' in a conversation with these DNA researchers they will have a heart attack before us!
Well, everything points out to hard times ahead before we can see some light at the end of the tunnel.