On Thursday, May 28, 2015 at 7:00:05 PM UTC-6, Dave Leatherman wrote:

Hint: the bird was named (by Audubon) after William MacGillivray.  Maybe 
> Bob Righter will be kind enough to tell us more about this interesting man, 
> who certainly deserves us getting his name right, in a future piece for 
> "Colorado Birds".  I hope so.
>

Not so fast! Here's news from the AOU:


   - MacGillivray’s Warbler becomes McGillivary’s Warbler. This one 
   surprised me. I’d heard about changing the species’ name to Tolmie’s 
   Warbler (see Harold Eyster’s article in the January 2011 *Birding*, 
   “MacGillivray’s Warbler: The Name That Shouldn’t Be,” pp. 38–42). But as 
   Sila Thiew, a spokeswoman for The Consortium writes, “At least half of all 
   birders spell that name wrong. So we decided to go for the path of least 
   resistance, and just adopt the commonest mispeplling [*sic*].”

Full details here:

http://birding.typepad.com/aba/2012/04/the-politics-of-checklist-instability.html

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado

P.s. With Andrew Floyd, I had a three-*Spinus* episode yesterday evening, 
Thurs., May 28. The bird were in flight and perched in trees at one of the 
ballfields in Lafayette, Boulder County: Pine Siskin, Lesser Goldfinch, 
American Goldfinch. Curious to have all three like that out on the 
"Plains," so to speak, of eastern Boulder County.

 

>
>
>
> Dave Leatherman
> Fort Collins
>  

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