Editor’s Notebook -- Danette Goulet
Danette Goulet
I have long thought people go too far with this whole politically
correct business. But now it seems we have a new wave of nit-picking --
scientific correctness.
Last week I took my dog down to the beach to find it deserted of
humans and canines, but rife with what I thought were sailed jellyfish.
They were quite stunning creatures, actually, ringed in a translucent
cobalt blue.
The empty beach, however, led me to believe they might be nasty
critters. So I left and began to research the gelatinous visitors.
I put a call in to our nature columnists Vic Leipzig and Lou Murray,
who told me that they were called velella and not really jellyfish at
all. Actually, Vic gave me a couple helpful tidbits of information
followed by the admonishment that biologists would ask that we not call
them jellyfish any longer, as they are not at all fish, but rather call
them “sea jellies.”
Oh, and starfish were no longer to be called starfish, but “sea
stars.”
Sea jellies? I have a whole host of problems with this. First,
everyone knows what a jellyfish is, but what, pray tell, is a sea jelly?
Sea jelly doesn’t even sound like something living. Which brings us to
our second point. I never remember thinking a jellyfish was actually a
fish, but I always knew it was alive. If you tell a child “look there’s a
sea jelly” they’re going to think mmmmm . . . peanut butter and jelly.
They already know of grape jelly, raspberry jelly, strawberry -- now
sea jelly. Better we call it “live often-stinging jelly” to be more
accurate.
But really, the major problem I have with this is that nature is
fraught with creatures that, by this standard, are misnamed.
Take the sea lion, for example -- not really a lion. How about the
water moccasin -- it’s not a shoe. There’s a lizard called a thorny devil
-- is that creature really Satan incarnate? How about the Tasmanian
devil?
Then there is the sea horse -- not a horse, not even a pony. And try
using a sand dollar to buy something, you won’t get much for a sand
dollar.
Need I go on?
Can’t we just continue to call it a jellyfish and point out to any who
might be confused that while it is a sea creature, it is not technically
a fish.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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