NamingNature: The Clash Between Instinct and Science
Carol Kaesuk Yoon (2009:
W.W. Norton & Co., 341pp.)
With the advent of increasingly sophisticated and quantitative approaches to taxonomy, we overlook the ways different
cultures label and group animals.
Biologist and top-flight science writer Carol Kaesuk Yoon set out to
write a book on the science of taxonomy and found a landscape much
more varied than she’d imagined. She embraces the concept of a near-universal
human way of perceiving nature, the umwelt, originating from our ancient
hunter-gatherer experience. The Linnean
approach is a bedrock technique for imposing order on the umwelt by deciding
what animal goes where, and she gives a lively history of the major figures
while foreshadowing the advent of cladistics.
This continues through Darwin and into the twentieth century, where
taxonomy became strictly the province of experts as the lumpers and splitters
continued their often-uncivil war.
(There were, at one point, 2,600 named genera of birds according to
lumpers, while splitters saw over 10,000 genera, more than the number of species
we accept today.) Darwin thought natural
selection would perfect taxonomy and end disputes: he couldn’t have been more
wrong. Evolutionary taxonomy was fully
as acrimonious as any other version. Other
conflicts, such as the worth of taxonomy itself, carried on, as did the never-ending
dispute over how to define a species. Ernst
Mayr’s Biological Species Concept held for several decades, but it was
challenged by Simpson’s revision of the evolutionary species concept and more
recently by the rise of DNA and then cladistics, both useful and widely used but
not yet dominant. [In October 2020, the American Museum of Natural History
reported new research, surprisingly not based on DNA but on morphology,
suggesting the 9,000-ish species of birds is far too low: the figure might be
double that. One for the splitters?]
In other cultures, Yoon reports, people tend to use Linnaeus’ binomial structure in their own way: there is a name
for a group and a name for each type.
Concerning the 137 known birds of paradise, not only do the locals of
Australia and New Guinea know and distinguish almost all, but their groupings
are very close to Mayr’s. Different
cultures classify things for different reasons – what mushrooms are edible,
what animals live within hunting distance, etc. – but the naming conventions,
based on the umwelt refined by accumulated practical knowledge, are not nearly
as dissonant as most of us would think.
We are, Yoon thinks, hard-wired to think about animals and nature a
great deal, even as small children, and notice types. A toddler who has seen
only a few dogs of very different breeds can still tell a newly-seen dog is dog
and not a cat. Where animals are lacking, imaginary ones or other things (like brand names) receive the benefit of this innate ability: her daughter's first word was "kiki," which she said while pointing at the Cookie Monster.
Animals, too, can distinguish between types of other animals:
witness the fact that monkeys have different cries to warn of different
predators. Even the simplest life forms have some faculty to distinguish
between their predators and their prey.
Yoon goes n to describe the new methods from Robert Sokal’s
computerized analysis of characteristics (species definition had long been a
matter of judgment, and in some ways still is), through the birth of molecular taxonomy
based on the chemistry of each organism, and then RNA and DNA, then to cladistics.
All of them, Yoon thinks, are valid, but also move us further from the umwelt
and into realms where comparing two animals visually becomes irrelevant. She
explains some of this very handily by assuming an ultra-simple animal, a blob, and
showing how some species diverge widely from the ancestor species and some
little, and how these developments can essentially be studied backwards to
analyze both evolution and relatedness.
The cladistics revolution began with Willi Hennig, a German fly specialist. The biggest impact of cladistics, to the lay reader, is the seemingly insane claim that there’s no such thing as “a fish,” only superficially similar tertrapods that may have had very different ancestries. The lungfish (her example) may be closer to the cow than the salmon. This technique not only supports now-common view that birds are dinosaurs, but suggests a reason to completely throw out existing taxonomy except where it aligns with cladistics.
The abandonment of the umwelt, Yoon writes, brings precision but loses the connection between humans and the natural world. She accepts the importance of continually improving the science of taxonomy but argues the now-dominant science of comparing molecules or DNA “has left us blind to our own view of the living world.” If animals are reduced to molecules and proteins, how much will we care to protect them? While taxonomy as practiced by societies historically living closer to nature is invariably local, with Aristotle a pioneer in trying to collect information from foriegn lands, there are reasons it continues to exist.
She discusses as an example the way people once thought of whales as fish [one need only consult
Melville for an example]. This view, while scientifically inaccurate, has
value in itself in understanding the umwelt and should not be forgotten. Yoon
also defends fish and considers that species are, to human senses, “the things
we cannot help but see.”
There’s much more in this book, from the loss of
ability to recognize living creatures in brain-damaged humans to various
thought experiments, and it adds up to a great deal to think about.
For my friends in cryptozoology, the book contributes to the longstanding debate about how well local cultures know their animal neighbors. There are published examples of indigenous groups, especially farming-centered as opposed to hunting-centered societies, whose members don’t know all the local fauna. Yoon offers numerous examples to the contrary, although she recognizes that need is a major driver of delineation. Indigenous cultures in Indonesia and the Philippines recognize 600 groups, which she considers equivalent to genera, of animals and plants. A striking example Yoon reports concerns the Tzeltal Mayans, among whom it's usual for four-year-olds to distinguish and name almost a hundred plants.
Many taxonomists, probably most (partitculary cladists, who Yoon more than once calls "rabid") will object to her phrasing of "science vs. the umwelt." I don't agree with it either, although I can also read her as not calling for the abandonment of science but for understanding that other concepts offer insights into animals and the people involved.
Yoon in this book does not just describe a science: she makes us think about what science is and how it affects us. It’s a very important work.
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