User talk:Curtis Clark/Archive 2
Come back soonI hope you return soon, we need you if wikipedia is to be of any use for those that want to learn about plant science, and I need you to correct my edits...I concur that the vandalism is frustrating and that sometimes it seems futile Hardyplants 11:06, 9 May 2007 (UTC) Hi Curtis--I share your frustration with vandalism. In my opinion rampant vandalism is one of the major things keeping Wikipedia from being as great as it could be. Vandalizing accounts should be blocked immediately and permanently. Vandalism is one reason (among others) why I don't spend as much time editing Wikipedia articles anymore. It's frustrating to scan my watch list and realize that a huge number of the edits represent vandalism, petty or otherwise; I revert the really flagrant ones but otherwise have pretty much given up. MrDarwin 15:58, 9 May 2007 (UTC) Hopefully you'll return after your break. More scientists = better encyclopedia, bottom line. I blocked that account, FYI. I'm more of a hardliner against vandalism than some others because the fallout of vandalism isn't limited to damaged articles... — Scientizzle 16:28, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
Edit summaryThis was a great one. :-) --YFB ¿ 03:20, 17 May 2007 (UTC)
Evolution of PlantsHi Curtis Clark. Thanks for your contribution / move at Evolutionary history of plants. I created the article with a stub, and the content that has filled in has sort of tended towards the new descriptive title. However, please feel free to add any new material which pertains to "such things as plant speciation and population genetics" - it was my intention to make the all-inclusive Plant Evolution article. Unfortunately, I am not an expert, and most of the content has been generously contributed by User:Shrimp wong. Please contribute if you can! P.S. - Sorry I didn't notice your page-move until now. Nimur 18:15, 22 May 2007 (UTC)
TranslationGood choice, just translating yourself. I've translated technical articles from Czech (and Russian) and not knowing the language (I know some Polish) has never been the barrier that lack of technical expertise has been. For an anatomy article you'll do a better translation into English than a native German speaker would. KP Botany 20:11, 27 May 2007 (UTC) ThanksThanks for the welcome mate. ExtraDry 11:01, 11 June 2007 (UTC) ThanksKP Botany 05:35, 13 June 2007 (UTC) Illegitimi non carborundum--Curtis Clark 13:28, 13 June 2007 (UTC) I won't. They're trying so hard, it's making it more funny than anything else. KP Botany 23:39, 13 June 2007 (UTC) Quote citationI really enjoyed the quote you mentioned on taxacom on becoming paraphyletic by having children ;) Very quotable, wish it was citeable too ! cheers Shyamal 04:11, 15 June 2007 (UTC) All that vitrioleAmazing, all that vitriole directed at me, and User:ChicagoPimp meant precisely what I said he meant the entire time. Here's a link to his user page.[1] KP Botany 20:11, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
Plant sexualityI would be grateful if you could add Plant sexuality to your watch list, I would like to rework the page and would appreciate it if you could copy edit and maybe give me a pointer or two. Thank you for you consideration.Hardyplants 04:00, 16 June 2007 (UTC) taxa nomenclatureAs per the rules [3] I understand that the authority is appended to all plant taxa. Then, somebody called our atention in the discussion page, claiming that the same rule applies to animal taxa. Please, check it out. Jclerman 23:45, 16 June 2007 (UTC)
Mixing up your Gómez Ortega's"I understand that Casimiro would often toy with the flowers to enrage them before he killed them." If this were Portuguese I'm sure I could come up with a forcado come back to this one, somehow. Thanks for the help, and the laugh. KP Botany 23:01, 24 June 2007 (UTC) Please edit my changes when (and IF) you get a second, I'm rather stressed for time. Also, I suggest it be an article on Syllable stress of Botanical Latin, so we can deal with pronunciation of foreign names and of acquired names from persons, all of which is covered extensively in books and in Taxon. Please comment on the latter, again, when and if you have the time. KP Botany 00:28, 7 July 2007 (UTC)
EvangelicalsIt's a bit surprising since I edit some evangelical Christian, Muslim, Indian deity, and ancient Roman Catholicism articles that nobody ever attempted to proselytize me until the Atheists. Well, it's the only time it has happened to me on Wikipedia, and generally Wikipedia editors leave that way off limits--it tends to be a very civil area on Wikipedia. Repugnant is the word, though. KP Botany 04:09, 10 July 2007 (UTC) Question on botanical authorityWhat does this mean where it says in for the botanical authority? "Aloe nyeriensis Christian in I.Verd.?" We seem to have the wrong authority for this taxon, but I don't know what the "in" means, I assume it means the same thing as in a bibliography, but I'm too brain dead right now to fix it, or look it up? KP Botany 03:11, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
Thank youThanks for helping with the tropical fruit, and for many little edits around the area. I hope you understand that you rock. ~ JohnnyMrNinja {talk} 07:38, 20 July 2007 (UTC) Discussion over Category:Botanists with author abbreviationsFirst, I would like to apologize if you felt that I insulted you. Second, I have had severe personality conflicts with User:KP Botany in the past, and I really do not like interacting with this individual. (Part of the problem is with me, but part of the problem is with the other user.) I would be willing to enter into a direct discussion with you if you prefer. Third, see my explanation of Category:NGC objects and Category:Messier objects. These are actually equivalent to categories on families and genus, as the objects in the catalogs all have shared characteristics (they all appear extended). Also, the catalogs are not really growing. (New General Catalogue is also poorly written, admittedly.) Fourth, I am really willing to compromise or even withdraw my nomination if someone can explain what is so special about the research of authors with abbreviated names. What type of research have they done that no other biologists have done? I just have the impression that the category is just used to indicate that the authors' names appear abbreviated in print, although it seems like Template:Botanist explains this much better than the category and that the average reader would be more likely to use the list to match abbreviations with authors. However, if these botanists are somehow special in some other way (such as being recognized as classical authorities on botany), then I would withdraw my nomination. I would really like to understand. Could you provide an explanation? Dr. Submillimeter 08:39, 23 July 2007 (UTC) I withdrew my nomination anyway. Dr. Submillimeter 09:27, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
Thanks/Help1. Thanks for the welcome 2. I started a page on Famous Poets Society, but it's rough because I haven't learned the ropes of the HTML code or whatever is used here. Do you think you could help?—Preceding unsigned comment added by SeekerofTruth3142 (talk • contribs) Double standardsActually, I don't have a double standard. I don't think Brya should have been banned permanently for what she was banned for--a technicality. She should have been blocked much earlier for what she did, and repeatedly blocked until she got the message. But, because she was never blocked, as I said repeatedly, she never got the message. However, if she's going to be blocked for sock puppetry, her puppets need to be stopped--because they continue italicizing higher taxa which is annoying to always be undoing. Another user got the same thing Brya did, User:Tajik, an irritating editor who has persianized the all of Afghanistan on Wikipedia. He got banned for sock puppetry while he was in the midst of a tricky mediation, and I don't for one minute think he sock puppeted. Like Brya, he was permanently banned as a technicality (in his case a false accusation of sock puppetry) while in the middle of some type of tricky mediation, or community ban discussion. This is an abuse of process in both cases, and it is rampant on Wikipedia, that editors, most often new editors, get indefinitely blocked after brief discussion on AN/I. Brya, like SallyForth, is accused of sock puppetry after the fact--Brya has used sock puppets, but I'm not so sure SallyForth did. And, in both of their cases, I think the sock puppetry should be ignored if they would agree to edit responsibly--an impossibility in Brya's case, and an insult in SallyForth's case, because SallyForth did nothing but edit irresponsibly as far as I can tell. And that's what she was banned for. No double standards at all, they both resorted to sock puppetry, if they both did, after blocks for other reasons or technicalities. And please read the conversation on TheresaKnott's page before judging me too harshly. I offered alternatives, tried to figure out what to do, was misdirected, mocked, had my intelligence debated and was called a troll (the first time she said I was trolling). And her apology where she proudly declares she should have helped because she could see I was "unable to follow the intructions" is simply lovely. At this point, I'm not the troll. In the meantime, I know that finding out that there is a user box, "This user is a pimp," which, like ChicagoPimp's user page, links to the article on pimp, will simply result in my being called overly sensitive, and a troll again by some other administrator, and getting piled on by the same group that came to jump on me when TheresaKnott posted again on AN/I. Again, at this point, I'm not the one trolling--but I know exactly how little say I have in anything on Wikipedia. KP Botany 03:00, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
Something more interestingI don't have the time or inclination to research, but the Daniel I. Axelrod article could use some work, whatever your personal opinion on him is. Controversies surrounding his contributions to biogeography and major disagreements about his climatic interpretations for the Western North American Tertiary, including the Jack Wolfe stuff, also. I have a set of COIs for this, so would tend to evaluate it based upon insider knowledge. Also his major monographs on Tertiary should be listed. He left his fossils to Cal, I think, not at Davis, by the way. I don't suggest you personally do any of this stuff, but if you have time and can add anything to the biographical material on him, that puts him in the context of his contributions to science and paleoecology in the 20th century, please do--it's a shame he doesn't have a decent article. I will eventually clean up and source it a bit. KP Botany 04:03, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
Some Axelrodiana:
Jim Doyle and I once talked about "Axelrod Hell", spending eternity in the uplands of the Triassic searching in vain for the ancestral angiosperms. I hope he's doing better than that. --Curtis Clark 05:35, 28 August 2007 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Lists#OrganizationBased on some of conversations I have had about lists on WP, I have added the section Wikipedia:Lists#Organization as a reference point. However I think the wording/formatting may be a little clumsy, and as it is a style guideline I thought I'd ask the opinion of an editor I respect. It all seems pretty non-controversial/common sense stuff, but after I wrote it I thought I should probably just make sure it reads that way. Would you mind giving it a gander? So far nobody has commented on the talk page or at WikiProject Lists about it, so I assume no one cares either way. But again, it's not Hamlet, it's just a reference point. ~ JohnnyMrNinja 08:52, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Jack WolfeI didn't know that Jack Wolfe had died. I was in a bad accident that summer, and my family says they told me, but I guess it didn't sink in. I will try to get a starter article on him posted this weekend if no one beats me to it. When I started looking stuff up, it wasn't so straightforward, because, unlike Axelrod, I didn't realize I'd never researched Wolfe's life or work, except in relation to Axelrod's. It is interesting that both attained great prestige for research they published late in life after already long and memorial careers. KP Botany 17:48, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
Gender-neutral language proposal at MOS talkHi, thanks for your comment there. But it's unclear whether you support the proposal. I wonder whether you could clarify this (Wikipedia_talk:Manual_of_Style#Proposal_for_guidelines_on_gender-neutral_language). Tony 06:36, 6 September 2007 (UTC)
pimpopedia.comWell dang nab it, I wish I had gotten there first. I do dislike the popularization of words that have been used to denigrate other human beings, or words that are about destroying other humans--it doesn't take the sting out to make it popular, it just allows people to ignore the evil. Even rappers nowadays are reconsidering their word choices. Wikipedia doesn't need to devolve. Yes, it's amusing. KP Botany 20:42, 13 September 2007 (UTC) Inflorescence subpageAs User:Curtis_Clark/Inflorescence has not been edited since June and the new article on inflorescences is on Wikipedia space (please have a look at it, I'm looking for feedback), I think you may want it deleted. Bye! Aelwyn 13:01, 15 September 2007 (UTC) Semi protectI have semi protected WP:PROTECT your user page as you seem to attract user-page vandals. Hope it is fine with you. Shyamal 05:28, 19 September 2007 (UTC)
VandalsThanks for note on vandals, its frustrating at times and unlike other headaches one encounters on Wikipedia , they can't be avoided. I am still learning the ins and outs of the "system" around here. Have found that at certain times of the day one gets more satisfying results when reporting vandals, so there is variation in response. I Hope the new year is going well with you. Hardyplants 21:09, 19 September 2007 (UTC) Asteraceae tribesHi. KP Botany suggested you might be able to assist with this query; in brief, identifying which tribes of are most heavily-represented in the existing Category:Asteraceae stubs (or perhaps otherwise, are there any subfamilies that are stable and generally-accepted enough to be useful as sub-types, for tagging purposes). Thanks. Alai 08:51, 14 October 2007 (UTC)
Hi there, I'm trying to tally up who supported this idea and who opposed it, but I'm not 100% certain if I should count your comment as a "support" or as "neutral", would it be possible for you to clarify your comment? All the best Tim Vickers 17:26, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
IPA pronunciation in naming of taxaThanks, Curtis, for referring me to the thread discussing the use of the IPA with scientific names. I agree with your point regarding regional pronunciation, and do just that for the SE Asian taxa that I mainly work with. As regards your correction of Darlingtonia, I've amended it slightly to include the near-close vowel ʊ, as ο is not used discretely in either RP or GA IPA conventions. Attenboroughii 18:02, 22 November 2007 (UTC)
There is a DRV discussion here related to the Japanese citrus category that may benefit from your input in view of your contributions to the Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Plants. Thanks. -- Jreferee t/c 20:39, 26 November 2007 (UTC) AfD nomination of Legal intoxicantsAn article that you have been involved in editing, Legal intoxicants, has been listed for deletion. If you are interested in the deletion discussion, please participate by adding your comments at Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Legal intoxicants. Thank you. --BJBot (talk) 18:19, 25 December 2007 (UTC) Rhizoids Vs root hairs Vs trichomesHi Curtis the definitions of these terms are sometimes very vague. However, I think that we may agree in the following: trichome is a general term for a diverse group of epidermal structures; root hair is a very specific and defined type of epidermal outgrowth present present in roots of vascular plants; rhizoids are present in many different organism, and their homoplasy is questionable.
It is innacurate to call root hairs a type of rhizoids, because it doesn't reflect the evolutionary uniqueness of root hairs. Do you agree? --Pirex (talk) 19:12, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
But pteridophytes do not have a root and, because root hairs are structures specific to the root epidermis, they do not have true root hairs... Nevertheless, I understand your point to simply use rhizoids as a morphological group. Cheers Pirex (talk) 19:27, 29 December 2007 (UTC)
You are absolutely, for a minute I was thinking in the rootless psilotales... I was searching through the literature but couldn't find a better definition of what a root hair and a rhizoid are than the following paper (which I don't have access to the full text): Pearson H (1969) Rhizoids and Root Hairs of Ferns. American Fern Journal 59, 107-122. [6] But I should note that everywhere the term root hair is used exclusively for vascular plants, while rhizoids exclusively in algae, bryophytes and fern gametophytes. Pirex (talk) 23:06, 29 December 2007 (UTC) |
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