No, I'm not staying up all night figuring out ways to bore you. I've actually been writing these in one of the most boring classes I've ever had the pleasure to proctor and uploading them later. I'm bored, so I thought I might share the wealth. It was kind of weird sending the "what species is the ferret?" post the other day, then getting my copy of the _Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature_ 53(4)(1996). I usually get it somewhat late. On pages 286-289 is a paper titled "Comments on the proposed conservation of usage of 15 mammal specific names based on wild species which are antedated by or contemporary with those based on domestic animals." The paper is actually four comments from Old World zoologists in favor of the resolution (which, as I understand it, would effectively return the binomial _Mustela furo_ to the ferret due to its domesticated status). Some excerpts: Elizabeth A. Voigt (South Africa): "Unless there is a uniform usage of specific names so as to identify domestic forms there will be considerable confusion in the literature with regard to domestic animals...." A. V. Abramov (Russia): "I agree with the proposal....to conserve the usage of separate specific names for wild and domestic mammals." Henry Gee (Great Britain): "[If you subsumed a domestic form within a non-domesticated form].....but this would --I think wrongly-- ignore the well-known differences bewteen wild and domestic forms." Alan W. Gentry (Great Britain): "The inconsistency in the nomenclature of species from which domesticated forms have been derived has led to ambiguity in academic studies and administrative difficulties in wildlife legislation and customs documentation. It is deeply undesirable to allow a situation to continue in which workers are confused by the use of names. ....Success of this application will also produce, as far as any outside change can, better conditions in which nomenclature for domestic animals can be systematized." The nomenclature of the ferret is basically the heart of the problem, not just in California regarding ownership, but also the basic problems with rabies testing, local anti-ferret laws, etc. Because the domesticated form has the same name (binominal) as the wild form, it is easy to misunderstand and confuse the two as one. This is precisely (well, excluding politics and ego) what is happening in California. Which is why it is so important to be precise when we discuss the ferret, using "domesticated" rather than "domestic," and "_Mustela furo_" instead of "Mustela putorius furo_." Domesticated gives the impression of a completed process, something that is finished or done, while domestic can be interpreted as an ongoing process, or even something that lives locally. For example, I could accurately say "The black-footed ferret is the only domestic ferret in the United States, but _Mustela furo_ is the only domesticated ferret." Confusing? Just remember domestic refers to something relating to home, and domesticated refers to something changed to exist within the home. In other words, all domesticated animals are domestic, but very few domestic animals are domesticated. The binominal _Mustela furo_ may be somewhat technically inaccurate, but its use has precedence, and helps to illustrate the difference between the wild and domesticated forms. Besides, isn't it fun to occasionally thumb your nose at the establishment? Didn't Ma Bell once say, "Let your fingers do the talking?" I was recently privately flamed about the implication that the CaCa Fish and Gestapo should be included among the Suidae. I should have explained the Suidae includes wild and domestic pigs. The objection wasn't actually that I didn't explain what Suidae meant, but was that I included the Fish and Gestapo within an honorable and intelligent group of mammals. I don't want to ham it up nor boar you with the details--lets just say I was taken to tusk over the remark as I rooted around for excuses--but I hearby promise to refrain from going hog-wild grunting my slanderous offerings in order to prevent bacon under future flames. Mo' Bob and 18 Mo' Poopmeisters (In Memory of Gus) [Posted in FML issue 1839]