1/3/2009 There is a wikipedia page on Don Jose de Canizares, but this cannot be the same Don Jose de Canizares that made the first map of San Francisco Bay and sailed on the first ship into the Bay, the "San Carlos" with Ayala? Could I be referring to his grandson?
Schmiebel (
talk) 08:02, 4 January 2010 (UTC)reply
Autopatrol and reviewer granted
Hello, this is just to let you know that I have granted you the
"autopatrolled" permission. This won't affect your editing, it just automatically marks any page you create as patrolled, benefiting
new page patrollers. Please remember:
This permission does not give you any special status or authority
Submission of inappropriate material may lead to its removal
Now we have two articles about Canis rufus rufus,
this one and
this one. Should we delete the former? There are also the taxa floridanus and gregoryi.
Chrisrus (
talk) 12:13, 7 July 2013 (UTC)reply
There really is not good justification genetically for any subspecies of Canis rufus but I think it is reasonable to have pages for Canis rufus rufus (Texas red wolf), Carnis rufus floridanus (Florida red wolf), etc. as long as the article cites Chambers' recent paper and states that whether there is enough genetic diversity to justify a subspecies name is debatable. I'll do that now on the Texas Red Wolf page and also add a redirect at the top to the primary Red Wolf page. As to whether the trinomial should be listed on the Red Wolf page, I think it should for historical reasons despite the lack of evidence for any subspecies divisions.
Schmiebel (
talk) 16:46, 7 July 2013 (UTC)reply
Is it important that the Red Wolf be declared a species so that it will be protected under the Endangered Species Act?
Chrisrus (
talk) 19:35, 8 July 2013 (UTC)reply
The red wolf has been declared an endangered species under the ESA since 1967, and yes it is critical that it stay listed as there are only 100 individuals in the wild (eastern North Carolina). But you are making me smarter - I found the USFWS Species Profile for the red wolf - and you can see here
http://ecos.fws.gov/speciesProfile/profile/speciesProfile.action?spcode=A00F that the USFWS now also classifies the red wolf as its own species, i.e. as Canis rufus, and not as a hybrid. I'll add this ref to the Main article and its talk page.
Schmiebel (
talk) 20:49, 8 July 2013 (UTC)reply
Chrisrus - I finally updated the Gray wolf wikipedia page to bring it up to date with the latest genetic research and make it consistent with the Red wolf page.
Schmiebel (
talk) 00:38, 10 February 2014 (UTC)reply
WikiProject Rivers
Hi, noticed your interest and work on rivers, thought you might help maintain tracking for these by adding {{WikiProject Rivers}} on the talk page so that
WikiProject Rivers collaborators can help. Also I didn't see your name on the active members and thought you might find the project of interest and might want to add your name to the
members list.
Wolfgang8741 says: If not you, then who? (
talk) 20:12, 11 November 2020 (UTC)reply