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Undid revision 602623205 by Mama meta modal (talk) CAPS only, the sentence case goes to the wikiproject.
rm. more POV-pushing by same editor (WP does not recognize IOC as a "standard" for our puriposes. We are not in the standards review and approval business. Also, there is nothing in particular that is national about common names.
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If the article is about an animal belonging to a group where [[WP:LOCALCONSENSUS|Wikipedia editors have agreed on a non-controversial standard]] for choosing among two or more common names, follow that standard.
If the article is about an animal belonging to a group where [[WP:LOCALCONSENSUS|Wikipedia editors have agreed on a non-controversial standard]] for choosing among two or more common names, follow that standard.
* For [[ornithology]] articles, Wikipedia uses the bird [[species]] common names according to the standard published by the [[International Ornithological Congress]] at the [http://www.worldbirdnames.org/ ''World Bird Names''] site which is periodically updated. Widespread species have multiple common names according to the country, but the IOC specifies a single standard name in English. For example, the article [[Southern Boobook]] is about a species known in various parts of the world by local, non-English common names like ''ruru'', ''mopoke'' and ''morepork'', and has regional-authority common names such as Tasmanian Spotted Owl. Create [[WP:Redirect|redirects]] from such alternative names, and from the [[Binomial nomenclature|binomial]], ''Ninox novaeseelandiae'', but place the main entry under the IOC common name – in this case, {{xt|Southern Boobook}}. ''(See [[#Capitalisation and italicisation]] below for upper/lower case rules).'' However, this choice has led into numerous debates since its implementation.
* For [[ornithology]] articles, Wikipedia uses the bird [[species]] common names published by the [[International Ornithological Congress]] at the [http://www.worldbirdnames.org/ ''World Bird Names''] site which is periodically updated. Widespread species often have multiple common names, but the IOC specifies a single name in English. For example, the article [[Southern Boobook]] is about a species known in various parts of the world by local, non-English common names like ''ruru'', ''mopoke'' and ''morepork'', and has regional-authority common names such as Tasmanian Spotted Owl. Create [[WP:Redirect|redirects]] from such alternative names, and from the [[Binomial nomenclature|binomial]], ''Ninox novaeseelandiae'', but place the main entry under the IOC common name – in this case, {{xt|Southern Boobook}}. ''(See [[#Capitalisation and italicisation]] below for upper/lower case rules).'' However, this choice has led into numerous debates since its implementation.


Do not use common names when it is not clear to what the name refers. The name [[sardine]] is used for many different species of small, oily fishes; the appropriate things to do are to write an article describing the attributes the species have in common under that name, and create separate articles for each [[genus]].
Do not use common names when it is not clear to what the name refers. The name [[sardine]] is used for many different species of small, oily fishes; the appropriate things to do are to write an article describing the attributes the species have in common under that name, and create separate articles for each [[genus]].
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Articles whose titles are the common (vernacular) names of animals are normally titled in [[sentence case]]—for example, {{xt|Przewalski's horse}}, {{xt|Black bear}}. Where a name contains a proper name, that word is also capitalised—for example, {{xt|Small Indian civet}}. Common names are never italicised.
Articles whose titles are the common (vernacular) names of animals are normally titled in [[sentence case]]—for example, {{xt|Przewalski's horse}}, {{xt|Black bear}}. Where a name contains a proper name, that word is also capitalised—for example, {{xt|Small Indian civet}}. Common names are never italicised.


A ''de facto'' naming convention (following the [http://www.worldbirdnames.org/ International Ornithologists' Union]) of capitalisation for the common names of birds has been applied to titles of species articles and [[ornithology]]-related articles, and similar conventions have been applied, though not consistently, to the vernacular names of dragonflies, moths and butterflies in article titles on [[Odonata]] and [[Lepidoptera]], respectively. Do not apply such capitalisation outside these categories.
Some wikiprojects have arrived at a [[WP:LOCALCONSENSUS|local consensus]] to always capitalise the common names of bird species (and subspecies) in [[ornithology]] articles, and to permit but not require upper-casing of species of dragonflies, and of moths and butterflies in articles on [[Odonata]] and [[Lepidoptera]], respectively. Do not apply such capitalisation outside these categories.


In a capitalised hyphenated name, the word after the hyphen is normally not capitalised, unless a proper name. See [[WP:WikiProject Birds#Naming|WP:WikiProject Birds]] for exceptions, which can be complicated.
In a capitalised hyphenated name, the word after the hyphen is normally not capitalised, unless a proper name. See [[WP:WikiProject Birds#Naming]] for exceptions, which can be complicated.


When creating a new article (or moving an existing one), make a [[Wikipedia:Redirect|redirect]] to it from the alternative capitalisation. For example, if you name the article [[Bald Eagle]], create a redirect to it from [[Bald eagle]] or vice versa (many field guides capitalise, and most other sorts of writing do not, so we have to account for both styles). Creating the redirect is {{em|not}} optional. There are some rare instances where lower case and capitalised versions have different meanings. Suitable links or disambiguation should then be used.
When creating a new article (or moving an existing one), make a [[Wikipedia:Redirect|redirect]] to it from the alternative capitalisation. For example, if you name the article [[Bald Eagle]], create a redirect to it from [[Bald eagle]] or vice versa (many field guides capitalise, and most other sorts of writing do not, so we have to account for both styles). Creating the redirect is {{em|not}} optional. There are some rare instances where lower case and capitalised versions have different meanings. Suitable links or disambiguation should then be used.


The common name of a ''group'' of species, or an individual creature of indeterminate species, is ''not'' capitalised beyond the first word in article titles (except where a proper name occurs): {{xt|Bottlenose dolphin}}, {{xt|New World monkey}}, {{xt|Rove beetle}}, {{xt|Slime mold}}.
The common name of a ''group'' of species, or an individual creature of indeterminate species, is ''not'' capitalised beyond the first word in article titles (except where a proper name occurs): {{xt|Bottlenose dolphin}}, {{xt|New World monkey}}, {{xt|Rove beetle}}, {{xt|Slime mold}}.



=== Scientific names ===
=== Scientific names ===

Revision as of 22:37, 4 April 2014

This guideline describes the conventions for the naming of articles on fauna, that is, animals.

Its advice also applies to protists, when appropriate, though instructions provided by WP:Naming conventions (flora) are sometimes more applicable, especially when the article uses the scientific name.

Use the most common name when possible

The article title should usually consist of the common (vernacular) name that is most common in English, following WP:Article titles#Common names:

Use the singular form, including for groups or types of animals, following WP:Naming conventions (plurals): Beetle not Beetles.

If the article is about an animal belonging to a group where Wikipedia editors have agreed on a non-controversial standard for choosing among two or more common names, follow that standard.

  • For ornithology articles, Wikipedia uses the bird species common names published by the International Ornithological Congress at the World Bird Names site which is periodically updated. Widespread species often have multiple common names, but the IOC specifies a single name in English. For example, the article Southern Boobook is about a species known in various parts of the world by local, non-English common names like ruru, mopoke and morepork, and has regional-authority common names such as Tasmanian Spotted Owl. Create redirects from such alternative names, and from the binomial, Ninox novaeseelandiae, but place the main entry under the IOC common name – in this case, Southern Boobook. (See #Capitalisation and italicisation below for upper/lower case rules). However, this choice has led into numerous debates since its implementation.

Do not use common names when it is not clear to what the name refers. The name sardine is used for many different species of small, oily fishes; the appropriate things to do are to write an article describing the attributes the species have in common under that name, and create separate articles for each genus. However, when there is a clear core meaning for the common name, with other meanings by analogy, then it is okay to use the common name for the "true" group:

  • Many elongated fishes are known as "eels", but "true eels" are in the order Anguilliformes, so it's appropriate to place them at the article name "eel", with the others listed at eel (disambiguation).

When what is the most common name in English, or the veracity of that most common name, is so disputed in reliable sources that it cannot be neutrally ascertained, prefer the common name most used (orthography aside) by international zoological nomenclature authorities over regional ones. When there is no common name or no consensus can be reached on the most common name, or if it isn't clear what taxon the common name refers to (as in the sardine example above), use the scientific name:

Monotypic taxa

If there is a choice of scientific names, generally use the lowest-ranked taxon which the article covers (i.e., species vs. genus), but for monotypic genera (where the genus has only one known species), use the genus name for the article title:

Redirects

Make redirects from alternative common names:

Make redirects from scientific names:

There may be several scientific names that need to be redirected:

Make redirects from alternative capitalisations (many guidebooks and specialist literature in various zoological fields tend to capitalise, so we must account for both usages):

Make redirects from English forms of scientific names:

Capitalisation and italicisation

Capitalisation of article titles follows general Manual of Style guidance on the use of capital letters.

Common (vernacular) names

Articles whose titles are the common (vernacular) names of animals are normally titled in sentence case—for example, Przewalski's horse, Black bear. Where a name contains a proper name, that word is also capitalised—for example, Small Indian civet. Common names are never italicised.

Some wikiprojects have arrived at a local consensus to always capitalise the common names of bird species (and subspecies) in ornithology articles, and to permit but not require upper-casing of species of dragonflies, and of moths and butterflies in articles on Odonata and Lepidoptera, respectively. Do not apply such capitalisation outside these categories.

In a capitalised hyphenated name, the word after the hyphen is normally not capitalised, unless a proper name. See WP:WikiProject Birds#Naming for exceptions, which can be complicated.

When creating a new article (or moving an existing one), make a redirect to it from the alternative capitalisation. For example, if you name the article Bald Eagle, create a redirect to it from Bald eagle or vice versa (many field guides capitalise, and most other sorts of writing do not, so we have to account for both styles). Creating the redirect is not optional. There are some rare instances where lower case and capitalised versions have different meanings. Suitable links or disambiguation should then be used.

The common name of a group of species, or an individual creature of indeterminate species, is not capitalised beyond the first word in article titles (except where a proper name occurs): Bottlenose dolphin, New World monkey, Rove beetle, Slime mold.


Scientific names

The first part of a binomial species name, the genus, is capitalized. The second part, the species, is never capitalised (even when derived from a proper name): Ninox novaeseelandiae versus Ninox Novaeseelandiae. The same applies to the third part of a trinomial name: Canis lupus arctos.

Because scientific names are always italicised, per WP:Manual of Style/Text formatting#Italic face, when the article title is a genus or lower-ranked taxonomic name (e.g. species or subspecies), the page title should also be italicised.

There are three ways to accomplish this:

  • {{Italic title}} will render the page title in italic, except any word in parentheses, e.g.:
Ninox
Morelia (genus).
  • {{DISPLAYTITLE}} can be used for titles that require manual formatting, e.g.
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Ninox'' cf. ''novaeseelandiae''}}
result:
Ninox cf. novaeseelandiae

Article text

This naming conventions guideline does not address prose usage.

See also