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User:DexDor/Categorization of organisms by geography

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  This essay contains the advice or opinions of one or more Wikipedia contributors. Essays may represent widespread norms or minority viewpoints. Consider these views with discretion. It is not a Wikipedia policy.
This essay is still under development.
Black-headed gulls are sometimes seen in Paris. However, per WP:NON-DEFINING, the article about that species should not be in a birds-of-France category.[1] Similarly, the article about snow should not be in a precipitation-of-France category and the article about Paris should not be in a cities-with-gulls category![a]

Wikipedia contains many thousands of articles about organisms (e.g. articles about species of plants and animals). Each such article should be categorized by the position of the organism in the tree of life (e.g. articles about birds should be in Category:Birds).

Many organism articles have also been categorized by characteristics such as when the organism was first described.[b] There are also characteristics such as being extinct or being edible that apply to some organisms and for which there are corresponding categories.

There are also categories based on the distribution (range) of the organism (i.e. which countries, continents etc the organism is/was found in). This categorization (e.g. putting articles in a category titled "Birds of Luxembourg"[c]) is the subject of this essay.

These are some of the silliest categories on Wikipedia. ...

Wikipedia categories are a very poor way to model distributions of organisms ...

Definingness

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Many species articles mention prominently (e.g. in the first sentence of the lede) the distribution of the species (e.g. "Foobaris foobaris is a species of foobar found across much of Africa." or "... found only in north west Barfooistan").

Thus, placing such an article in a geographical category does not necessarily always break the WP:NON-DEFINING guidelines. However, unlike characteristics such as position in the tree of life, the distribution of an organism can not always easily be categorized.

Problems with these categories

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What does "... of <place>" actually mean?

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Being a Czech I noticed: (a) there are two categories: Category:Fauna of the Czech Republic and Category:Fauna of Czech Republic, (b) content of both is absurd: none of the animals is endemic to Czech lands; wild cat and lynx haven't been seen here for century and the viper is common in half of Europe. The whole structure looks as "me too" gone wild.

One cause of problems with organisms-of-place categories is that different editors (often with different backgrounds) interpret the "of <place>" part of the category name differently; possible meanings of "Category:Foobars of Barfoo" include:

  1. It's for any foobars found anywhere in Barfoo.  This interpretation could mean that the category contained the same species etc as are listed in an article named "List of foobars of Barfoo" except that the list can also include species for which en wp does not (yet) have an article.  This interpretation can lead editors (often working from off-wiki lists/databases) to categorize articles about organisms for small regions (countries or smaller) that are not mentioned in the article.
  2. It's for foobars found anywhere in Barfoo, but excluding foobars that would be "better categorized" in a category for a wider region.
  3. It's only for foobars found throughout Barfoo.[d] Difficulties with this interpretation include: (1) This leads to difficulties in defining "throughout" (or similar). (2) This isn't the way most editors interpret these categories. (3) Under this interpretation a category titled "Category:Endemic foobars of Barfoo" would not belong under a category titled "Category:Foobars of Barfoo" (which would probably be confusing to readers/editors).
  4. It's for foobars found only in Barfoo.[2] However, the usual convention in en wp is that such categories use the word "endemic" (e.g. "Category:Endemic foobars of Barfoo").
  5. A combination of several of the above -different inclusion criteria would apply at different levels (county/country/continent etc). This would almost certainly be too complex to be maintainable.
  6. A combination of several of the above - different inclusion criteria would apply to different types of organisms.

This disagreement means (1) we get one editor adding a category tag to an article and then another editor (or sometimes even the same editor[3]) removing it (a waste of editor time[e]), (2) the categories are less useful (to readers/editors) than they could be (and may be very misleading). This essay supports the first of these meanings, but only for large regions (e.g. continents) or, possibly, the phasing out of this categorization altogether.[f]

The category structure can be confusing / convoluted

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For example, the Chamois article was (via other categories) in Category:Marine organisms.[g]

For example, (as of October 2020) animals found in Metropolitan France are categorized below Category:Fauna of France, but plants found in Metropolitan France are categorized above Category:Flora of France (due to different parts of the category structure interpreting "France" differently).

Other problems

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  • Where species-of-region categories have been created for small (on a global scale) regions (e.g. countries in Europe) articles are placed in these categories even though it is not a defining characteristic.
  • This is an example of an article in 18 country categories for countries that are not mentioned in the text.
  • Here 88 edits were made to a single article (in 6 months) that just change categories.[4]
  • There's a particular problem of editors working from off-wiki databases and categorizing organism articles for countries (or other regions) regardless of the article text.[5]
  • "A large number of fungi are global in their distribution - placing them in such a category would obviate the need to laboriously list individual countries by name"(comment on a user talk page)

Quotes

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"There are numerous cases where the categories are added in a very slipshod way, difficult to evaluate if the categorization is correct." (User:Shyamal at a CFD in 2009)

"As an entomologist and participant in WikiProject Insects, I have reservations about how useful these by-continent or by-country categories are as the vast majority of articles are not categorized at all. However, keeping it at the continent level (with major islands like Madegascar and New Zealand retained due to their specialized biota), should simplify Wikipedia's categorization issues. Should the tens of thousands of insect articles ever be categorized by place, more subcategories would be needed, but this is unlikely to happen in the near future due to the lack of editors and scientific data." (User:M. A. Broussard at a CFD in 2016)

"The only geographic categorys, which make sense are such like "category:mammals of Africa" or better "category: mammals of the Afrotropic ecozone". (User:Altaileopard at Talk:Leopard in 2007)

"At times the number of categories some animal articles are included in borders on the ludicrous." (User:Johnpacklambert at a CFD in 2014)

"For flora [of place] categories to be complete lists, every plant article would have to be categorized with every appropriate lowest rank in the WGSRPD hierarchy (with a resulting ridiculous level of category clutter)." (User:Plantdrew at WT:WGSRPD in 2014)

"Red Deer exist on several continents, so their presence in the Scottish Highlands may be of note to the topic of the Scottish Highlands, but not to the topic of Red Deer. Many animal articles, such as Rat, would have more category tags (or see also links) than article text if every country and region got its own fauna category. List articles are the way to go for such highly localized divisions of flora and fauna." (User:Postdlf at a CFD in 2006)

"Much as it grieves me, as a biologist, to remove the ability to look up species from any region, large or small, the reality for a world encyclopaedia is to work on larger units, or we'll have unmanageable numbers of categories for ubiquitous taxa. That shouldn't prevent Categories for endemics from these smaller areas, or 'List of native species from...' pages' if relevant." (User:Nick Moyes at a CFD in 2018)

"These are some of the silliest categories on Wikipedia. Probably better to merge all categories of this type, including Category:Fish of Europe, to Category:Fish of the World, and then delete that category." (User:Epipelagic at a CFD in 2014)

"We don't have enough editors who gnome this kind of material to keep it under control." (User:Rkitko at a CFD in 2015)

"... the fact a bird is found in any particular place does not make that fact WP:DEFINING." (User:Animalparty at a CFD in 2018)

"Wikipedia is not a relational database and we should not use categories to try to replicate same. ... We would be much better served by having a good complete list, and directly linking the reader to off-site databases which are specialized in this topic. Having a woefully and only partially populated set of state categories that don't do what they say on the label is bad for Wikipedia." (User:Obiwankenobi at a CFD in 2014)

Endemic

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Even if an article is categorized only for regions where the species is endemic the article may still be in several geographic categories - e.g. Phrynobatrachus vogti is in Category:Frogs of Africa, Category:Amphibians of West Africa and Category:Endemic fauna of Ghana (as well as the non-geographic Category:Phrynobatrachus).

In some cases an article about a species is (also) placed in a purely geographic category - e.g., Killarney shad is in Category:Killarney. This is reasonable if the species is endemic to a region that does not have an "Endemic biota of <region>" category.

See #Appendix Z - Proposed Endemic CFD

Many articles say something like "This species is found in <region>." rather than saying whether or not the species is endemic to that region (which may not be known). Some articles use terms such as "nearly endemic".[6]

Introduced / invasive

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Example CFD: 2014 re fish

Example CFD: 2014 re Everglades

As of May 2018 the Coypu article ("Native to ... South America, ... introduced to North America, Europe, Asia, and Africa, primarily by fur ranchers.") is in categories for Africa, Asia, Europe and the US.

Flora

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See Wikipedia:WikiProject Plants/World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions.

Intersection of low level type of biota and region

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Several editors have expressed dislike of low level intersection categories, for example:

"We don't need Category:Rosaceae of China when we have Category:Rosaceae and Category:Flora of China" (User:Plantdrew in a CFD in 2018)
"Personally, I would also get rid of intersectional categories like Category:Wolf spiders of Europe; they are unnecessary, confusing and inconsistently used." (User:Peter coxhead in a CFD in 2018)

Category:Angiosperms of Asia has been deleted at CFD[7], but there are other categories like this - e.g. Category:Rosales of Australia (as of 2018). Note: angiosperms is above rosales.

Articles about specific areas

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E.g. Feral parakeets in Great Britain

Appendices

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Appendix A - World regions

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There are several schemes of dividing the world's land area into regions. These include the following:

Botanical continents as defined by the WGSRPD
6 of the 8 biogeographic realms (ecozones)      Nearctic      Palearctic      Afrotropic      Indomalaya      Australasia      Neotropic (Oceania and Antarctic ecozones not shown)
Statistical regions as defined in the UN geoscheme (omitting Antarctica)
UNSD geoscheme for Asia
  • Oceans

Appendix B - Regions that are used

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The table below shows some of the larger regions that are used to categorize organisms.

The abbreviations defined in the right hand column of this table are used in Appendix C.

Regions
Region (Note 5) Map WGSRPD? Includes Flora Fauna Abbrev.
Cosmopolitan n/a n/a n/a No (2017) Category Cos
Europe Yes i Category Category Eu
  British Isles w i Category Category BI
Asia No i Category Category As
  Central Asia Yes (Note 2) i Category Category CAs
  Western Asia (Note 4) Yes i Category Category WAs
  East Asia q q i f Category EAs
  Southeast Asia q q i f Category SEAs
    Indo-China (flora) map q q i Category n/a I-C
    Indochina (fauna) map q q i n/a Category Ica
  Arabian Peninsula w i Category Category AP
Africa map ? i Category Category Af
  North Africa Yes (Note 1) i Category Category NAf
  Sub-Saharan Africa Sub-Saharan Africa ? i No (2018)
(Note 3)
Category SSAf
    West Africa /
    West Tropical Africa
Yes i Category Category WAf
    Southern Africa (fauna) No i n/a Category SAfu
    Southern Africa (flora) Yes i Category n/a SAfl
  Macaronesia w i Category Category Mac
North America w i Category Category NAm
   Canada map w i Category Category Can
   Greenland w i Category Category Gd
   Central America w i Category Category CAm
   Caribbean w i Category Category Carib
South America ? i Category Category SAm
Oceania
(Note 6)
Not exactly
(Note 7)
i Category Category Oc
Antarctica
(inside the inner blue line on the map)
Yes i Category Category Ant
Subantarctic islands
(between the two blue lines on the map)
Yes i Category Category SAIs

Note 1: The WGSRPD region is named "Northern Africa".

Note 2: The WGSRPD region is named "Middle Asia".

Note 3: Was emptied and then deleted as empty.

Note 4: This is the WGSRPD region of Western Asia. "Western Asia" is sometimes interpreted as a wider area.

Note 5: Any linked article may not use exactly the same definition of the region as that used in the table.

Note 6: There may be some overlap between Oceania and Southeast Asia.

Note 7: See notes at Category:Flora of Oceania.

See: Locator maps of oceans

Appendix C - High level organism-of-region categories

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The table below shows (by means of redlinks and bluelinks) which high-level categories exist. In some cases a redlink is because there are few, if any, organisms of that type native to that region. The abbreviations used (e.g. "Af" means Africa) are defined in the table above.

Matrix 2
GTM Lev. Global Continent Sub-continent Ocean Other
G 0 E Organisms / biota NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 1 K Animals / fauna NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 1 K Plants / flora NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 1 K Fungi NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 2 P Vertebrates NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 2 P Invertebrates NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 2 P Molluscs NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 2 P Arthropods NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 3 Mammals NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 3 Birds NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 3 Fish NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 3 Crustaceans NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 3 Insects NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 3 Arachnids NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 3 Reptiles NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 3 Extinct species / biota NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 4 Extinct animals NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 4 Cephalopods NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 4 Bats NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 4 Carnivorans NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 4 Rodents NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 4 Beetles NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
M 4 Pinnipeds NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 4 Primates NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 5 Hymenoptera NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 5 Lepidoptera NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 5 Butterflies NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 5 Moths NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 5 Spiders NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 4 Lists of biota NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
T 4 Freshwater fish NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 5 Lists of animals NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 6 Lists of birds NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
M 0 Marine organisms / biota NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
M 1 Marine animals / fauna NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
M 2 Marine molluscs NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
M 2 Marine fish NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G X P Annelids NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 5 p Prehistoric birds NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt
G 6 p Cretaceous birds NAm Eur As Oc
SAm Af Ant
Can CAm Gd NAf WAs AP CAs EAs
Mac WAf SEAs Aus
Lant ArcO
SouO IndO PacO
BI Casp
Ica Oz NZ tAnt

Note: The above analysis uses User:DexDor/treg2.


Matrix (land)
Type Categories Notes
    Endemic biota

N/g As AP WAs Cau CAs EAs Af NAf WAf Eu NAm CAm SAm Aus Oc Arc Ant

      Endemic fauna

N/g As AP WAs Cau CAs EAs Af NAf WAf Eu NAm CAm SAm Aus Oc Arc Ant

        Prehistoric plants

N/g As AP WAs Cau CAs EAs Af NAf WAf Eu NAm CAm SAm Aus Oc Arc Ant

        Prehistoric animals

N/g As AP WAs Cau CAs EAs Af NAf WAf Eu NAm CAm SAm Aus Oc Arc Ant

         Prehistoric vertebrates

N/g As AP WAs Cau CAs EAs Af NAf WAf Eu NAm CAm SAm Aus Oc Arc Ant

           Prehistoric fish

N/g As AP WAs Cau CAs EAs Af NAf WAf Eu NAm CAm SAm Aus Oc Arc Ant

           Prehistoric reptiles

N/g As AP WAs Cau CAs EAs Af NAf WAf Eu NAm CAm SAm Aus Oc Arc Ant

Note: Each type of organism (row) only appears once in the above table even if it could be placed in several positions.

Note: The above analysis uses User:DexDor/treg.

Note: A bluelink can indicate a redirect rather than a category, but that only occurs rarely (if at all) at this level.

Note: The aim is to fix any anomalies highlighted by this analysis.

Note: Some of the categories listed above (e.g. those for vertebrates) are virtually container categories as most articles can be placed in a more specific subcategory (e.g. for birds).

Appendix D - Who has created/populated these categories?

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Many of the editors who have created categories for inappropriate small/political regions or have placed articles in such categories have been acting in good faith. However, there have been some problem editors very prolific in this area. For example, the editors listed below have all been blocked indefinitely (indeffed).

  • Special:Contributions/George_cowie (2006-2008) indeffed as a sockpuppet - created many categories for small areas of political geography (example CFD). This edit, for example, adds category tags for dozens of countries to an article which doesn't mention any of those countries.
  • User:Look2See1 (2010-2017) - indeffed for category edits (had previously been indeffed on Commons).
  • User:Nono64/User:NotWith[8] (2006-2014) - e.g. creating more categories whilst CFDs were ongoing. On French Wikipedia there are comments such as "... has brought nothing but trouble since he arrived in ... 2006.", "... persistence despite warnings and discussions disrupt the encyclopedic work" and "does not respond ... and continues".[9] This user often created a category, put one article in it, created another category.... (rather than fully populating categories).[10]
  • User:R567 (2017-2017) - indeffed as a sockpuppet of Wwikix.

In some cases most of the edits to a organisms-by-geography category page are by editors who were indeffed.[11]

Some categories were created because they were listed at Special:WantedCategories[12] where a better option might have been to remove the redlink category tag.

See also: Wikipedia:WikiProject Tree of Life/Nono64

Appendix E - Process for doing upmerges

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  • Select categories to be upmerged ...
  • Consider whether lists should be created - i.e. if the lists don't exist already (possibly at a higher level) and the category looks suitable for listifying (e.g. most of the articles in it contain a referenced statement that the animal is found in that country etc). However, generally it would be better to create such lists directly from a RS than from listifying a category.
  • If necessary (?) create a subcategory for endemic species and move articles down into it. For some articles this allows 2 or 3 category tags to be replaced by a single category tag (example?). It is not always obvious from the article text whether or not the article belongs in the endemic category - the following is provided for guidance:
    • Found in X   no?
    • Found only in X   yes
    • Found only in X and Y  yes but higher level
    • Endemic to X  yes
    • Endemic in X  no

With examples?

  • CFD ... Note: (As of January 2018) most of the categories that have been upmerged have been fully deleted (i.e. any reference to them is a redlink) however some categories have been replaced by a category redirect (to the category for the larger region).[h]
  • After a category upmerge (e.g. from country categories to region categories) there may be some articles that contain redundant category tags (e.g. multiple copies of the same category tag - or has this now been fixed in the merge tool?), or where the article is already in a subcat of the region category). Thus some tidying up may be desirable.
  • Where the areas don't align. - Russia, Egypt, Turkey ... example CFD...
  • After some country-level categories have been deleted (upmerged) the parent by-country category may just contain a few categories (e.g. for large countries such as Australia) - it may then be possible to delete (upmerge) the by-country category (example CFDs).
  • Consider (especially if the categories have been emptied but not deleted several days after the closure of the CFD discussion) replacing the categories by category redirects (e.g. {{Category redirect|Fauna of the Arabian Peninsula}}).
Note:This CFD made Category:Freshwater fish of Ghana a redlink, but this CFD made Category:Fish of Togo a redirect.  Is a redlink or a redirect better? See Wikipedia:Category redirects that should be kept?

Appendix F - Proposed guidelines for geographical categorization of organisms

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Introduction

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These guidelines are about categorization of organisms by geographical regions (e.g. continents). Note:

These guidelines are intended to be consistent with, but more specific than, the general guidelines for categorization in Wikipedia. Even more specific guidelines may be drawn up for categorization of particular types of organisms.

These guidelines are divided into 3 parts; guidelines about the category structure, guidelines about placing articles in the categories and guidelines about specific types of organisms.

Guidelines for organisms-of-region category pages

[edit]

1. If a type of organism is not currently categorized by location then don't create such categories without at least getting agreement at relevant wikiproject(s). For example, Category:Annelids[13], Category:Bacteria and Category:Polychaetes do not have by-location subcats.

2. The category name should be in the format "<type of organism> of <region>" - i.e. do not use demonyms (such as "Asian") in names of organisms-of-region categories. Note: Category:Holarctic fauna etc are not covered by these guidelines.

E.g. Category:Antelopes of Asia, not Category:Asian antelopes(CFD)., Category:Southern jaguars or Category:Northern jaguars of South America(CFD).

3. In the category name use a term for the type of organism that is consistent with other similar categories. In particular, the terms "biota", "flora" and "fauna" should be used instead of alternatives (except for some categories for extinct / prehistoric life).

E.g. Category:Biota of Rajasthan, not Category:Fauna and flora of Rajasthan(CFD), Category:Organisms of Foobar.
E.g. Category:Fauna of Africa, not Category:Wildlife of Africa[14], Category:Animals of Foobar.[15]
E.g. Category:Flora of Japan, not Category:Plants of Japan.
E.g. Category:Extinct biota of Asia, but Category:Extinct animals of Asia.
E.g. Category:Prehistoric life of Europe, not Category:Fossil taxa of Europe.
E.g. Category:Prehistoric animals of Europe, not Category:Prehistoric fauna of Europe.

4. Organisms-of-region categories should generally have names that are meaningful to (well-educated) readers. They should not use terms for types of organisms that are known only to specialists. E.g. the terms "fauna" and "mammals" are ok, but not, for example, "protostomes" and "deuterostomes".[16] I.e. not every level in the tree of life needs geographical categorization.[17]

5. When defining the region, physical geography should take precedence over political geography. E.g. For categorizing biota Cyprus should be considered part of Asia rather than part of Europe.[18]

5a. Regions used for categorization of biota can be defined using political boundaries. For example, Category:Biota of Central Asia defines a region consisting of several countries.

6. Only create categories for contiguous regions.

7. The category page should make clear what the region covered by the category is.[k]

7a. An organisms-of-region category can contain a thumbnail map indicating the region.
7b. A organisms-of-region category can contain links to the corresponding categories for neighboring regions.

8. Only place an of-region category in another of-region category if the child category's region is completely within the parent category's region. E.g. an of-Russia category should not be placed in an of-Europe category as that might cause organisms found only in the far East of Russia to be categorized under Europe.

  • In such cases it can be useful to include an explanation (including a link to the other category) in the text of one/both of the category pages.

9. Do not create categories based on the time of year that animals (e.g. birds) are found in a region - e.g. there should not be categories such as "Wintering birds of Africa" (see CFD in 2018).

10. Do not create categories for regions that partly overlap regions for which we already have categories. For example, the Indo-Pacific region covers part, but not all, of the Indian and Pacific oceans (for which we already have categories). Indo-Pacific may be a good description of the distribution of some species, but it's not good categorization to divide the World up into multiple overlapping areas (it would result in more effort spent on categorization and less complete categories).[19]

11. Do not create a category unless you intend to fully populate it yourself (at least by re-categorizing articles that are in the parent categories).[l]

Guidelines for placing articles in organisms-of-region categories etc

[edit]

1. Not every article about a type of organism should be categorized by which region(s) it is found in. For example, bacteria are not placed in geographical categories (there is no by-location category below Category:Bacteria).

2. Obey normal categorization guidelines (e.g. WP:SUBCAT) - e.g. an article shouldn't be placed directly in both Category:Fauna of Africa and Category:Fauna of North Africa.

3. Categorize by where the plant/animal is or was native. E.g. xxxxxx

  • Note: A species does not have to be distributed throughout a region to be categorized for that region.

4. Do not categorize non-geographical categories for groups of plants/animals under geographical categories - e.g. xxxxxxxx Reason: xxx xxx


5. Do not categorize a species in a region if that species is just an occasional visitor (e.g. a vagrant).[20]

...

6. There are many categories that are about a particular region, but are not specifically about biota - for example, Category:Natural history of California (which covers geology etc as well as biota).  An article about an organism should only be placed directly in such a category if that organism is endemic to that area. For example, Killarney shad can be placed directly in Category:Killarney, but Osmia xanthomelana ("widely distributed throughout the Palearctic ...") should not be in Category:Llŷn Peninsula (even if that location is mentioned in the article about the species).[m]

7. Articles about taxa at the rank of genus or higher should only be placed in a category for a region if the organism is endemic to that region.[n]

Guidelines for particular types of organisms

[edit]

The following guidelines apply to particular types of organisms:

1. Microorganisms should not be categorized by region.[21]
2. Marine organisms (e.g. salt water fish) should be categorized by the seas/oceans they are native to and not by the land areas (e.g. continents) that they are found off the coasts of.[o]
A category page for fauna of a land area can contain a link to categories for fauna of the neighboring seas/oceans.
3. Land organisms (including freshwater fish) should be categorized by the land masses (e.g. continents) they are native to.
4. Fish that can live in both sea and fresh water can be categorized in both the relevant terrestrial and marine regions.
5. Birds should be categorized by the land masses (e.g. continents or groups of islands) they are native to and not by any oceans/seas they may spend part of their life in.
6. Prehistoric lifeforms (i.e. known from fossils) can be placed in categories such as Category:Prehistoric reptiles of North America and (where appropriate) placed in categories under Category:Fossils, but should not be placed in the same categories as current species.
???what's the readon for the last rule? See e.g. Archimyrmex in [[Category:Hymenoptera of South America|†]]
7. For recently extinct species ....

Appendix G - Guidance pages for particular types of organisms

[edit]

The pages identified below provide guidance about geographical categorization for some types of organisms.

It will make categorization more consistent (and hence better for readers and editors) if the guidance for different types of organisms can be brought more into alignment. However, getting complete alignment between, for example, flora and fauna may not be achievable.


Appendix H - Country etc to region mapping

[edit]

The table below lists the countries of the World plus some other land (or land and sea) regions (e.g. regions for which categories have been created).

NP = Number of pages (including subcategory pages) directly in the category

Fauna by region categories
Small region NP in (linked) fauna category Larger region Notes
Abkhazia 0 C
Afghanistan 23 Western Asia C
Akrotiri and Dhekelia 0 (CFD) Cyprus E
Albania 21 Europe C
Albertine Rift montane forests 0 (CFD) Sub-Saharan Africa E
Algeria 37 North Africa C
Andorra 7 Europe C
Angola 16 Central Africa C
Anguilla 2 E
Antigua and Barbuda 8 C
Argentina 35 C
Armenia 20 C
Australia 36 C
Austria 18 Europe C
Azerbaijan 38 C
Bahamas 34 C
Bahrain 3 (CFD) Arabian Peninsula C
Bangladesh 12 C
Barbados 15 C
Belarus 5 Europe C
Belgium 7 Europe C
Belize 8 C
Benin 18 West Africa C
Bermuda 29 C
Bhutan 12 C
Bolivia 23 C
Bosnia and Herzegovina 11 Europe C
Botswana 8 Southern Africa C
Brazil 9 C
British Isles 38 Europe E
Brunei 38 C
Bulgaria 16 Europe C
Burkina Faso 11 West Africa C
Burundi 5 Central Africa (TBC) C
Cambodia 7 C
Cameroon 16 Central Africa C
Canada 22 North America C
Cape Verde 13 West Africa C
Central African Republic 46 C
Ceuta 0 (CFD) North Africa E
Chad 9 C
Chile 61   C
China 45  East Asia C
Republic of China 0 C
Colombia 16 C
Comoros 6 East Africa C
Democratic Republic of the Congo 25 C
Republic of the Congo 64 C
Costa Rica 121 C
Croatia 18 Europe C
Cuba 24 C
Cyprus 15 Western Asia C
Czech Republic 10 Europe C
Denmark 10 Europe C
Djibouti 15 East Africa C
Dominica 15 C
Dominican Republic 19 C
East Timor 0 C
Ecuador 47 C
Egypt 25 North Africa / TBD C
El Salvador 9 C
England 16 Europe E
Equatorial Guinea 10 C
Eritrea 9 East Africa C
Eurasia 0 (CFD) n/a E
Estonia 8 Europe C
Eswatini 4 Southern Africa E
Ethiopia 32 East Africa C
Faroe Islands 7 Europe C
Fiji 10 C
Finland 8 Europe C
France 29 Europe C. Note: overseas territories.
Gabon 117 C
Gambia 33 West Africa C
Georgia (country) 25 C
Germany 17 Europe C
Ghana 26 West Africa C
Gibraltar 10 Europe E
Greece 57 Europe C
Greenland 17 C
Grenada 14 C
Guatemala 25 C
Guernsey 0 (CFD) Europe E
Guinea 29 West Africa C
Guinea-Bissau 8 West Africa C
Guyana 14 C
Haiti 18 C
Hawaii 26 E
Honduras 19 C
Hungary 8 Europe C
Iberian Peninsula 33 Europe E
Iceland 13 Europe C
India 45 C
Indo-Pacific 0 (CFD) E
Indonesia 53 C
Iran 88 Western Asia C
Iraq 25 Western Asia C
Ireland 31 Europe C
Republic of Ireland 2 Europe C
Isle of Man 8 Europe E
Israel 27 Western Asia C
Italy 53 Europe C
Ivory Coast 44 West Africa C
Jamaica 18 C
Japan 65  East Asia C
Jersey 0 (CFD) Europe E
Jordan 30 Western Asia C
Kazakhstan 34 Central Asia C
Kenya 53 East Africa C
Kiribati 8 C
Korea 20  East Asia C North Korea & South Korea
South Korea 8  East Asia C
Kosovo 6 Europe C
Kuwait 3 (CFD) Arabian Peninsula C
Kyrgyzstan 17 Central Asia C
Laos 14 C
Latvia 10 Europe C
Lebanon 23 Western Asia C
Lesotho 40 Southern Africa C
Levant 0 (CFD) Western Asia? E
Liberia 10 West Africa C
Libya 20 North Africa C
Liechtenstein 6 (CFD) Europe C
Lithuania 6 Europe C
Luxembourg 5 (CFD) Europe C
Republic of Macedonia 0 Europe C
Madagascar 9 Southern Africa C
Malawi 6 Southern Africa C
Malaysia 26 C
Maldives 19 C
Mali 13 West Africa C
Malta 21 Europe C
Marshall Islands 10 C
Mauritania 12 West Africa C
Mauritius 9 C
Melilla 0 (CFD) North Africa E
Mediterranean (basin/region) 0 (CFD) Split Europe / North Africa / Asia E Note: There is a separate category for the Mediterranean Sea (for marine fauna).
Mexico 59 C
Federated States of Micronesia 11 C
Miombo 0 (CFD) Southern Africa E
Moldova 7 Europe C
Monaco 3 Europe C
Mongolia 8 East Asia C
Montenegro 8 Europe C
Montserrat 8 E
Morocco 24 North Africa C
Mozambique 14 Southern Africa C
Myanmar 15 C
Namibia 34 Southern Africa C
Nauru 5 C
Navassa Island 0 CFD Haiti E
Nepal 14 C
Netherlands 13 Europe C
New Zealand 27 C
Nicaragua 14 C
Niger 6 West Africa C
Nigeria 72 West Africa C
North Korea 4 East Asia C
Northern Cyprus 0 (CFD) Cyprus C
Norway 26 Europe C
Oman 13 (CFD) Arabian Peninsula C
Pakistan 152 C
Palau 39 C
Palestinian territories 0 (CFD) Middle East E
Panama 123 C
Papua New Guinea 17 C
Paraguay 19 C
Peru 23 C
Philippines 25 C
Poland 18 Europe C
Portugal 56 Europe C
Qatar 6 (CFD) Arabian Peninsula C
Romania 18 Europe C
Russia 27 C
Rwanda 7 C
Saba 0 E
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic‎ 0 O
Saint Kitts and Nevis 11 C
Saint Lucia 7 C
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 29 C
Samoa 16 C
San Marino 3 Europe C
São Tomé and Príncipe 13 C
Saudi Arabia 11 (CFD) (CFD Arabian Peninsula C
Scotland 15 Europe E
Scottish Highlands 0 (CFD) Scotland E
Senegal 25 West Africa C
Serbia 12 Europe C
Seychelles 10 East Africa C
Siberia 55 Asia E
Sierra Leone 14 West Africa C
Sinai 0 Western Asia O
Singapore 15 C
Slovakia 9 Europe C
Slovenia 18 Europe C
Solomon Islands 21 C
Somalia 36 East Africa C
South Africa 85 Southern Africa C
South Ossetia 1 C
South Sudan 7 C
Spain 75 Europe C
Sri Lanka 16 C
Sudan 14 East Africa C
Sumatra 206 Indonesia E
Suriname 129 C
Swaziland 0 (redirect) Southern Africa C
Sweden 12 Europe C
Switzerland 19 Europe C
Syria 19 Western Asia C
Taiwan 22  East Asia C
Tajikistan 22 Central Asia C
Tanzania 21 East Africa C
Thailand 21 C
Togo 27 West Africa C
Tonga 13 C
Transnistria 0 C
Trinidad and Tobago 5 C
Tunisia 20 North Africa C
Turkey 41 Europe / Western Asia C
Turkmenistan 24 Central Asia C
Tuvalu 6 C
Uganda 12 East Africa C
Ukraine 20 Europe C
United Arab Emirates 13 (CFD) Arabian Peninsula C
United Kingdom 23 Europe C. Note: overseas territories.
United States 64 North America C
Uruguay 13 C
Uzbekistan 17 Central Asia C
Vanuatu 20 C
Venezuela 14 C
Vietnam 22 C
Wales 8 Europe E
Western Sahara 13 North Africa O
Yemen 18 (CFD) Arabian Peninsula C
Zambia 52 Southern Africa C
Zimbabwe 12 Southern Africa C

C = From a list of 205 countries in 2018 (link), E = Other categories that exist or have existed, O = Other.


Appendix J - How organisms are categorized

[edit]

See User:DexDor/BioCat

Appendix U - Objections to the deletion/upmerge of these categories

[edit]

Procedural objections

[edit]

  • I fully agree that "[Animals] of [Country]" is lists, not categories. But this needs to be done for the group, not one at a time. (CFD in 2017)
  • The desirability of the fauna-of-country category system is a much bigger question that should not be discussed and demolished piecemeal in a place where few relevant editors see it, as is now happening ... CFD in 2018
Response: A CFD for all countries (and all types of flora/fauna) would be too large to be manageable - especially where are cases (e.g. Turkey) where an upmerge needs to be done carefully.
When categories are upmerged sometimes a redundant category tag is left on an article (example edit to fix). Doing upmerges in chunks means that this can be fixed sooner than if hundreds/thousands of categories were upmerged in one go.[p]
  • "Comment There are 100 vertebrates of a country categories, which are listed as subcategories of Category:Vertebrates by country. It makes no sense to single out the West African countries and not do mergers for other regions. Given that there are many categories of animals by country (e.g. Mammals by ..., Amphibia by ..., Birds by ..., etc) as well as the less used animals by region categories (e.g. Category:Vertebrates by region), the proposal only makes sense as part of a major reorganisation of the category system." (CFD in 2018)
Response: Wikipedia has never had a comprehensive set of vertebrates-by-country categories - e.g. there has never been such a category for Italy. Less than half of the 200+[23] countries have a vertebrates-of-<country> category. Where it makes more sense to categorize things by country (e.g. Category:Buildings and structures by country) there is a much more comprehensive set of sub-categories.
There is no intention to delete categories for regions/countries such as Australia. It could equally well be argued that the CFD is singling out vertebrates (rather than, for example, insects or plants) and to do everything in one CFD would be too big a job. The intention is that each CFD makes an improvement to the category structure.

"Countries deserve these categories"

[edit]
  • "North Korea and South Korea are separate states and each deserves a "Fauna of <country>" category. You are not supreme deity in some computer fame to decide merging countries. (CFD in 2018)
Response: The CFD is not "merging countries" (whatever that means); it is changing how some articles are categorized.
  • I do not see why some countries should be discriminated just because they are small. The interest for these categories comes from the fact that the world is organized in sovereign states, not that countries are natural biogeographic units by themselves (with few exceptions). Recognizing "Fauna of Luxembourg" does not logically imply that "Moths-of-Vatican-City" should be recognized. (CFD in 2018)
Response: That, for example, Fauna of Australia is a more appropriate category than Fauna of Liechtenstein is simply a consequence of that being found in Australia is usually/always defining for a species whereas being found in Liechtenstein is rarely/never defining. It does not imply that Liechtenstein is any less of a country (e.g. less important, less interesting, less independent ...) than Australia; it's simply about the most appropriate way to categorize animals (i.e. whether or not the country corresponds to a region that is suitable for such categorization).

"Readers want to know what animals they may encounter where they are"

[edit]
  • It is routine for works intended for the general public to divide things this way [(by US state)]. people reasonably enough want to see what animals [they] are likely to encounter where they are. (a CFD in 2009)
Response: Use a list - see fuller response at the CFD.

Otherstuff arguments

[edit]
Response (1) WP:OTHERSTUFF.

"Commons has categories for small areas"

[edit]
  • When we categorize images [on Commons] [we] usually use a country/region/district stucture so ... if it's in the Kruger Park [Category] Birds of Kruger National Park as a sub-category of Birds of South Africa. (a CFD in 2018)
Response: Categories such as Birds of Kruger National Park might work well on Wikimedia Commons where you are categorizing the location of photographs, but when categorizing an article about a species that might put the article in a lot of categories - see discussions such as CFD for Birds of Nairobi.

"Categories are better than lists"

[edit]
  • "Oppose Categories are meant to help readers to find articles. Many readers will be interested in what creatures live in a country. "Organisms of countryX"-type categories are also useful for editors to monitor progress and to see what is wrong/outdated/missing. That some countries are small and that some creatures occur in many countries (and hence might be judged as leading to WP:NON-DEFINING) should not used to decimate a very useful system that is not dependent of dedicated editors. Readers could be satisfied with lists instead of categories, but (1) lists and categories are complementary systems and (2) suitable lists are often missing, incomplete, or outdated. The category approach is easy to maintain, whereas the list approach is not. At least for groups of organisms where editor base is small, categories are much more practical solution than lists. (CFD in 2018)
Response: tbd The "system" has never been more than very sparsley populated (many lists for birds/insects show dozens/hundreds of species in a country but the corresponding category has only a handful of articles).
The list is easier to maintain as each entry can be referenced, the list page can be watchlisted, notes can be included ...
  • The trouble is that for groups with fluid taxonomy and relatively high rate of species discovery, such as amphibians, list articles are difficult to maintain, requiring effort from dedicated editors. The beauty of categories is that they are easy to maintain, which is an important consideration for groups with few dedicated editors. E.g., for a widely distributed species, a simple taxonomic change like assigning a species to another genus may necessitate updates in tens of list pages, whereas the categories would simply follow when the page is moved. (CFD in 2018)
Response: Categories do have an advantage over list articles that if the species is renamed (how common is that?), and hence the article is renamed, then the category automatically shows the new name.  However, a list showing an old name (that links, via a redirect, to the new name) is less of a problem for readers than an incomplete  list.  A category that attempts to list all the species found in a small (on a global scale) country may never be complete because editors may remove the category tags (example) if there are a lot of them (and especially if the article makes no mention of that country).  Some amphibians (e.g. European green toad which has also previously been categorized for Spain) are found across lots of countries (and of course things like birds even more so).  Lists also have other advantages over categories (e.g. showing latin names in italics).  In my experience the editors/bots who create new species articles (not specifically amphibians) don't put a lot of effort into seeing which countries (and smaller regions) that the species occurs in have categories (which can be pretty random); they often choose to categorize just at the continent level. Hence, a fauna-of-country category won't "automatically" update.
Some examples of edits that remove country / state category tags: moth bat leopard spider plant

Other objections

[edit]
  • "Listing what fish are in what location is important, ..." (CFD 6 Feb 2014)
Response: tbd
  • "I do oppose these mergers. Country-specific organism categories may not satisfy WP:Defining, but they have great practical value because they allow easy overviews of species per country. ...."(User talk page)
Response: tbd

Appendix V - Example CFD discussions

[edit]
Example previous CFDs
Year Type CFD Outcome Merge target
y t c ongoing x
y t c ongoing x
y t c ongoing x
2018 Birds Birds of Equatorial Africa merge Sub-Saharan Africa
2018 t   n/s korea  merge most x
2018 Fish/Reptiles Fish of Burkina Faso merge West Africa
2017 Birds Birds of Nairobi merge East Africa
2017 Lizards Lizards_of_South_Africa merge Africa (+)
2017 Anthozoa Anthozoa_of_Algeria merge North Africa
2017 Arthropods Arthropods_of_the_United_Kingdom merge Europe
2017 Fauna Fauna_of_Northern_Cyprus merge Cyprus
2017 Mammals Mammals_of_Benin merge West Africa
2017 Birds Birds_of_Cordillera_Neovolcanica_Mexico merge Mexico
2017 Insects Insects_of_Spain delete n/a
2017 Amphibians Amphibians_of_Jordan merge Middle East
2017 Birds Birds_of_Iraq merge Middle East
2017 Insects Insects_of_the_Palestinian_territories merge Middle East
2017 Mammals Mammals_of_Libya merge North Africa
2017 Moths Moths_of_France delete n/a
2016 Marine mammals Marine_mammals_of_Hawaii delete n/a
2016 Mammals Mammals_of_Algeria merge North Africa
2016 Hemiptera Hemiptera_by_country delete n/a
2016 Birds Birds_of_Egypt delete n/a
2016 Hemiptera Hemiptera_of_the_United_Kingdom merge Europe
2016 Birds Birds of Angola merge Sub-Saharan Africa
2015 Birds Birds_of_Borneo keep x
2015 Birds Birds_of_Turkey merge x
2015 Mammals Mammals_of_Jordan merge Middle East
2015 Birds Birds_of_Algeria merge x
2015 Birds Birds_of_the_Palestinian_territories merge x
2014 Fauna Fauna_of_the_United_States_by_state merge x
2014 Moths Moths of Cameroon tbd x
2014 Fauna Fauna_of_Akrotiri_and_Dhekelia rename-merge x
2014 Reptiles Reptiles_of_Metropolitan_France merge x
2014 Birds Birds_of_Suriname merge x
2014 Birds Birds_of_Lithuania merge x
2014 Fish Fish_of_Liechtenstein merge x
2014 Insects Insects_of_Andorra merge Europe
2014 various Amphibians_of_the_Iberian_Peninsula  rename/purge n/a
2014 Moths Moths_of_Metropolitan_France merge x
2014 Amphibians Amphibians_of_Albania merge x
2014 Mammals Mammals_of_Monaco merge x
2014 Moths Moths_of_Andorra merge x
2015 Biota Biota of French territories delete x
2014 Spiders Spiders_by_European_country merge Europe
2013 Birds Birds_of_Ukraine_and_others no consensus (was deleted in 2014) x
2013 Mammals Mammals_of_the_United_Kingdom merge x
2009 Birds Madrean sky islands delete n/a
2009 Hemiptera Hemiptera_of_Michigan delete n/a
2009 various Biota of countries test proposal keep[24] Afrotropic etc
2008 Flora Lower_Colorado_River_Valley_flora_categories merge North American desert
2008 Fauna All_.22Category:Fauna_of_<country>_categories withdrawn x
2007 Fauna Fauna_of_Europe_subcategories merge x
2006 Fauna Fauna of the U.S. no consensus x

Appendix W - Questions as yet unresolved

[edit]

The following questions have not yet been resolved:

  • What should be done with categories such as ... See related CFD.
  • Afghanistan - which region does it belong in?
  • If a region (Foobaria) (e.g. a continent) is divided into 2 sub-regions (North Foobaria and South Foobaria) and an organism is native to both sub-regions then how should that organism's article be categorized?
Option 0. Inconsistency ...
Option 1. The article belongs in the category for Foobaria, but not the categories for the sub-regions.
Option 3. The article belongs in the categories for the sub-regions.
Option 1 has been proposed[25] as a way to reduce the number of category tags on articles, but would have several problems: (1) It's not how categorization normally works in wp; it would make the inclusion criteria on the South Foobaria category something like "Fauna native to South Foobaria, but excluding fauna also found in North Foobaria" which is not how many editors would expect the category to be used. The scheme would also not cope if there is more than one way of grouping sub-regions.[q] (2) If the number of sub-regions is greater, e.g. 5 and the organism is native to most, but not all of the sub-regions ...

Appendix X - Notes re improvements to this essay

[edit]
  • Plants / insects / freshwater fish ...
  • Missiles-by-operator etc (example CFD)
  • Example CFD nomination - template for substitution?
  • Category:Cosmopolitan species
  • How many countries have fauna-of etc categories? - see BHG's analysis in a 2018 CFD.
  • Mention sortkey - as non-geo cats, use dagger?
  • Mention "animals" etc used on prehistoric cats.
  • Mention wildlife/lists - no clear distinction?
  • Many articles in Category:Coral reefs are categorized both as an organism and as a place.
  • In the table show which are (probably) redirs using  {{PAGESINCATEGORY|Fauna of Foobar}}

Strategy

[edit]
1. Define a scheme of continent level regions for fauna that cover whole world without overlaps. Explain reasons for any deviations from flora. Get agreement/acceptance.
2. Define a scheme of subcontinent regions for fauna that cover each continent region without overlaps. Explain reasons for any deviations from flora. Get agreement/acceptance.
3. Define a scheme for oceans/seas. Get agreement/acceptance.
4. Modify the category pages to align with the regions defined - e.g. add maps.
5. Delete (upmerge) categories for other regions.
6. Define the type-of-organism categories that every continent/subcontinent is expected to have (subject to organisms of that type being native to that region). Get agreement/acceptance.
7. Define guidelines. Get agreement/acceptance.

...

Note: Many of the above can be progressed in parallel.

Appendix Y - To be done

[edit]

Middle East

[edit]
Category:Endemic fauna of Lebanon‎ should be upmerged to Category:Biota of Lebanon
Category:Important Bird Areas of Lebanon should be upmerged to Category:Biota of Lebanon
Note: the 3 lists are in Category:Lists of biota of Lebanon.

Africa

[edit]

Other

[edit]

Other NotWith/Nono64 categories - link?

Appendix Z - Proposed Endemic CFD

[edit]

The word "endemic" has (at least) two meanings that can be confused - e.g. at CFD, a talk page discussion, edits adding incompatible endemic categories. Either of the renames proposed here should make it clearer. Options B/C are clearer than Option A, but Option A may be more "professional" language.

Note: no categories have been tagged for this CFD. At this stage I'm looking for the opinion of other editors on whether we should (0) leave these categories as is, (1) proceed to a "real" CFD to rename a sample batch of these categories and then (if the CFD succeeds) do the rest speedily, (2) something else. Note: (for the moment) I am not looking at the corresponding flora categories.

See also CFD discussion in July 2020

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Afaik no-one has attempted to categorize types of precipitation by where it occurs or cities by what birds they host, but these are examples showing that not every fact needs to be a category link.
  2. ^ Perhaps all organism articles should be in such categories.
  3. ^ The category titled "Birds of Luxembourg" was deleted by a CFD in 2014.
  4. ^ "perhaps it isn't as useful to include in "Birds of Europe" as one might think, as it misleadingly suggests that the species is present throughout the whole continent, when it isn't ; just because it occasionally occurs in Winter in one remote part doesn't really make it eligible to be included in 'Birds of Europe'." (User talk:Couiros22 in October 2016)
  5. ^ As well as wasting the time of the editors adding/removing the category tags it also affects editors looking at watchlists and article history.
  6. ^ We don't, for example, categorize rocks by which countries they are found in (example CFD).
  7. ^ This was fixed by a 2018 CFD.
  8. ^ See Wikipedia:Category redirects that should be kept
  9. ^ Note: These guidelines do apply to categorization by habitat and region (e.g. Category:Freshwater fish of South Asia).
  10. ^ Perhaps (for simplicity of the guidelines) those categories should be included - see Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2019_February_5#Category:Afrotropic_ecozone_biota
  11. ^ An example of category text that fails this is "This category should include animals endemic to the Pacific Northwest of the North American continent. .... Along with the US states, animals in this category may be found throughout the provinces of Canada that are considered part of the Pacific Northwest. These include British Columbia and more broadly may include the Yukon. Though no agreed boundary exists, a common conception for the Pacific Northwest includes the U.S. states of Oregon, Washington, and the Canadian province of British Columbia. Broader conceptions reach north into Alaska and Yukon, south into the coastal and mountainous regions of Northern California, and east into Idaho and Western Montana, western Wyoming, and western Alberta, to the Continental Divide." (Category:Fauna of the Pacific Northwest as of January 2020).
  12. ^ E.g. do not create a category, add one article to it, create another category as one (now blocked) editor was doing ...
  13. ^ See Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2019_January_30#Natural_history_of_California_by_region.
  14. ^ WP:FishCat (as of February 2020) and categorization advice for plant articles (WP:WGSRPD) which says "Higher taxa are included only if endemic (for example, a genus endemic to Western Australia could have the genus article itself included in that category).".
  15. ^ E.g. "This species occurs in the Atlantic Ocean off Morocco ..." was categorized for the country and not for the ocean.
  16. ^ The tool that does the upmerge avoids putting a duplicate category tag on a page, but doesn't spot redundant category tags.
  17. ^ E.g. (as of 2018) Category:Fauna of Egypt is under both North Africa and Middle East categories.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Note: This edit put the gull article in a birds-of-Lithuania category. A category for birds-of-Metropolitan-France was deleted by a CFD in 2014.
  2. ^ Example of that interpretation: edit
  3. ^ E.g. adding category tags and then removing them.
  4. ^ Note: Another 6 similar edits were then made to the article.
  5. ^ E.g. "The categorization was based on The Euro+Med PlantBase." (A CFD in 2015)
  6. ^ Salalah guitarfish (as of 2018)
  7. ^ Although that deletion may of been because of Asia not being a WGSRPD continent rather than because of the inersection.
  8. ^ Nono64 was blocked for disruptive editing (with account creation blocked) for 2 weeks in Sept 2011. This followed many talk page complaints and at least one ANI. NotWith started editing an hour after Nono64's block expired. One of the first of NotWith's edits concerns Nono64.
  9. ^ Google translate from French Wikipedia
  10. ^ example contributions history (note: this will not be so obvious if the categories are deleted).
  11. ^ E.g. of the 5 edits to Category:Invertebrates of Scotland (since deleted) 4 were by editors who were later blocked; the other edit was a revert.
  12. ^ E.g. Category:Flora of Russia (created in 2007)
  13. ^ See Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2018_December_29#Category:Annelids_of_Europe.
  14. ^ Example CFDs: Wikipedia:Categories_for_deletion/Log/2006_November_9#Wildlife_of, Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2009_October_16#Animals_and_fauna_categories and Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2018_July_27#Category:Wildlife_of_the_Balkans
  15. ^ Example CFD: Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2009_October_16#Animals_and_fauna_categories
  16. ^ Example CFDs: Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2018_June_6#Category:Protostomes_by_location, Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2018_March_26#Category:Deuterostomes_of_Asia
  17. ^ E.g. "I know what an insect, moth, beetle is, but not an arthropod" Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2014_November_26#Category:Invertebrates_described_in_1896
  18. ^ Example CFD: Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2018_July_28#Category:Invertebrates_of_Croatia
  19. ^ Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2019_March_17#Category:Indo-Pacific_fauna.
  20. ^ Example of a relevant CFD
  21. ^ Category:Microorganisms, Category:Bacteria etc do not have by-region subcategories.
  22. ^ Wikipedia:WikiProject Plants/Categorization does not (as of 2018) discuss geographical categorization.
  23. ^ See List of sovereign states.
  24. ^ The proposal was to upmerge from countries to ecozones. It failed because of objections such as "almost all the books and other sources go by country. That's the way they've been written, and extracting & reorganizing the data would be a useful, albeit enormous, job--and it would basically be the sort of synthesis that belongs on some other project."
  25. ^ E.g. "Flora should be either in the North Africa parent category (if it occurs both in the Maghreb and in Egypt) or in the Maghreb category (if it doesn't occur in Egypt) or in the Egypt category (if it doesn't occur in the Maghreb). This way there is no overlap." (a CFD in 2015)