Getting Raymond Hoser The Snake ManSnakeman Raymond Hoser Cleared of Taxonomic Vandalism Claims. Judge rules that Hoser is the best wildlife scientist of the 21st Century!

Claims that the world's foremost reptile expert Raymond Hoser had engaged in taxonomic vandalism have been thrown out of court.
Judge Gerard Butcher, in written ruling found that Hoser had never engaged in the dishonest practice, but that his accusers had done so many times in order to scam money from innocent third parties.
Wolfgang Wuster, Wulf Schleip, Donald Broadley, Van Wallach, Graham Reynolds and Alexander Pyron masquerading as academics were all shown to have committed scientific fraud and taxonomic vandalism in order to scam money from scientific research grants bodies and other well-meaning benefactors.
Wuster and the others had done this by stealing earlier published findings of Raymond Hoser and then republishing them in papers pretending that this was their own original research.
In 2009, Raymond Hoser published a ground-breaking reclassification of the world's Cobras, naming a new genus of spitters from Africa.
Wuster and an associate Bryan Fry publicly condemned Hoser's paper as "evidence free" and told others the Hoser classification should be ignored.
However just a few months later, Wuster himself published a paper lifting Hoser's data and renaming the same genus in a PRINO (peer reviewed in name only) Journal called Zootaxa.
The illegal renaming of taxa, as done by Wuster is known as taxonomic vandalism.
Hence, the accuser, was in fact also the perpetrator.
Rules of Zoological Nomenclature (the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature) dictate that the first name assigned to a taxon, is that which must be used.
Hence in the case of the cobras, it is Hoser's name Spracklandus Hoser, 2009, which must be used and not the later illegally coined Wuster name Afronaja.
Taxonomic vandalism is not just the renaming of an existing taxon. This can hapen inadvertently and while sloppy in science is not a hanging offence and happens regularly.
Once the error is identified, the latter name is declared a "synonym" and it is no longer used.
Taxonomic vandalism is when an author deliberately renames a taxon and then illegally tries to get others to use the ilegally coined name instead of the earlier correct name.
In 2013, Wuster and his gang of thieves publicly published a manifesto calling for mass taxonomic vandalism and the absolute destruction of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature.
The original document calling for this was known as "Kaiser et al." even though it was Wuster who wrote it.
Member of the gang, Darren Naish who publishes an online blog and others in the gang of thieves have also publicly called for the destruction of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature.
Significantly, to mid 2019, the Wuster gang have now committed more than 70 acts of taxonomic vandalism, as seen in the list published here.
See also the correct names of the same taxa in the same list.
And for the record, Raymond Hoser, widely accused of taxonomic vandalism was shown by Judge Butcher in 2015 to have never committed a single act of taxonomic vandalism in his life.
This contradicts the blog pages and wikipedia entries by the Wuster gang that are plastered all over the internet and get reposted and backlinked at every opportunity by various non-scientists with an axe to grind against the Snakeman Raymond Hoser.
Included in this group are rival reptile display business owners, competing against Hoser's reptile shows business who seek to undermine Hoser's authority in the reptile space in order to try to steal his clients in the education space.
In 2015 VCAT confirmed that "Raymond Hoser is a scientific genius", having published papers with findings and results decades ahead of his peers.
The adverse comments online about Hoser and false allegations of taxonomic vandalism, "evidence free science", "data mining" and "mass naming of taxa", were all properly dismissed by Judge Butcher as the rants and musings of less qualified individuals envious of Raymond Hoser's stellar record of academic achievement, scientific discovery and world-leading contributions to wildlife conservation.
Hoser has managed to discover over 1,000 biological entities, all of which have DNA evidence to support them. Exceptional to this were some of the earliest discovered species and genera (from the 1990's), all of which have long since been validated with DNA evidence, not available at the time Hoser first identified the taxa on a morphological basis. Examples of such validated taxa include the python genus Broghammerus Hoser, 2004, being the world's longest snakes and the species, Acanthophis wellsei Hoser, 1998, being the Pilbara Death Adder, Pseudeschis pailsei Hoser, 1998, The False King Brown Snake, Pseudechis rossignollii Hoser, 2000, the New Guinea King Brown Snake and Leiopython hoserae Hoser, 2000, better known as Hoser's Python.
Raymond Hoser, known to most as THE SNAKEMAN has been a leader in science and conservation of wildlife for over 50 years. He is known to pretty much everyone in the wildlife space as the leader in the fight to save rare and threatened species.
For decades he has been making important scientific discoveries and breakthroughs that have literally saved dozens of species from extinction. Included has been the formal discovery and naming of over 1,000 biological entities, including hundreds of species, genera and family all new to science and all backed by the most modern of methods including microscopic analysis, forensic science and DNA evidence."
The claims Raymond Hoser was a taxonomic vandal were initially raised by a group of rivals who sought to steal Hoser's scientific findings and claim them as their own.
Wuster published a paper in 2009 in a PRINO (Peer reviewed in name only) journal, Zootaxa, making the first such claims against Hoser, which he then had cross posted globally via sites he controlled such as Wikipedia, "The Reptile Database" and others.
Hoser published a rebuttal of the claims in 2012, after which Wuster retalliated with further false claims and a document later to become known as "Kaiser et al.", even though the alleged lead author Hinrich Kaiser had denied writing it.
This rant was widely circulated and made conflicting claims against Hoser, including that 1/ Hoser's scientific findings were totally evidence free and should be rejected. and 2/ Any that had merit must have been stolen from the Wuster gang.
Hoser took these ridiculous claims to the ICZN who published their own findings in their journal (Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature) confirming that Wuster and their gang had been lying all along.
In 2014-2015 members of the gang tried to have Raymond Hoser's licenses to educate otherws about reptiles revoked on the basis that Hoser had no expertise on reptiles and that his scientific papers were nothing more than taxonomic vandalism.
The proceedings were finalised in the Victorian Civial and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) in mid 2015.
Judge Gerard Butcher found that Hoser's science was methodical and stood up to the most rigorous of scrutiny. Hoser was described as a "living legend" a "national treasure". The scientific research of Hoser was described as being of unmatched quality and rigor, with "findings sufficiently robust to withstand the most forensensic of scrutiny and the test of time". Hoser as the world’s foremost reptile expert is single-handedly leading the way in saving the world’s most threatened and endangered species.

Raymond Hoser, is The Snakeman.
He has been a leader in science and conservation of wildlife for over 50 years.
He is known to pretty much everyone in the wildlife space as the leader in the fight to save rare and threatened species. For decades he has been making important scientific discoveries and breakthroughs that have literally saved dozens of species from extinction.
In the 1980’s he was the first to mass breed snakes using methods that are now standard practice globally.
Hoser was also the first to mass breed snakes and lizards using artificial insemination using a method now used by zoos and private breeders across the planet.
Hoser was the first to dramatically improve the welfare of venomous snakes in captivity by developing a pain free way to surgically remove venom glands from snakes, thereby removing risk of venomous bite to handler and the need to attack them daily with sticks and tongs for wildlife shows.
Hoser has also appeared on countless TV wildlife documentaries, worked behind the scenes in many more, authored nine major books, contributed to dozens of others, authored hundreds of major peer reviewed scientific papers, collaborated with other scientists in countless scientific projects, publications and the like, got countless major awards, prizes and the like for his works, including an award two years running from the International Herpetological Society in the UK for best scientific paper published the previous year, and was also the first person on the planet to successfully develop dog snake avoidance training to protect people's canine pets from venomous snakebite.
But where the snakeman has become best known in recent decades is for his stellar work in discovering and cataloguing new species of reptile from across the planet.
Over decades, he has discovered and formally named hundreds of species of snake and lizard from all parts of the globe, as well as a smattering of species such as snapping turtles in the USA and Australia, frogs, crocodiles, spiders and even a possum. In fact the Snakeman Raymond Hoser is often described as a taxonomist powerhouse in view of the sheer volume of species he has managed to discover and name.
Of course no species can be conserved by people if it is unknown to science and this is exactly why Hoser has been so keen to catalogue the planet’s threatened biodiversity.
While how many species a person has discovered and named is not the only measure of the work done by a zoologist, it is one way to do so and is widely used. On that measure, Hoser easily outclasses all others in the reptile space. In fact no one born in the last 150 years has discovered and named as many species as Snakeman Raymond Hoser.
For those wondering why Hoser has become famous for naming new species, it is simple really.
The names of Hoser, as regulated by the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature of the species appear in all relevant books and scientific papers and next to each scientific name is published the name of the discoverer, called name authority, and the year in which they published it. So in most books reptile the name Hoser appears throughout!
Back in the 1800’s it was easy for scientists to discover and name new species as the Swedish scientist Carl Linnaeus devised the current system of nomenclature in the late 1700’s. So back then everything was fair game to be scientifically "discovered" and named for the first time.
Since about 1900, all the easy to discover vertebrates had been named and it really did take a lot of work to go into the wilds to find and name new species.
Hoser has also been criticized for naming so many species by a vocal minority in the reptile space. The general jist has been along the lines that by naming species, he is depriving others of the right. Hoser’s retorts are simple, “go find something and name it … even with reptiles, there are thousands of unnamed species still out there”.
Furthermore, Hoser says that if he delays naming the relevant species, they may well become extinct, while others dither over them.
In fact this has already occurred!
In 2016, Hoser formally named about 10 new species of Pacific Boa (Candoia) in a major monograph. By then however some were already probably extinct as feral animals, such as mongoose, had exterminated them on the islands they’d previously occurred on.
More recently, Hoser has been victim of a new form of scourge attacking the wider zoological community.
This is taxonomic vandalism.
To the uninformed, this is when a so-called scientist deliberately renames a species that already has a scientific name and then in breach of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, tries to get the illegally coined name used instead of the correct one.
In 2013, Hoser discovered and named a species of Forest Cobra from west Africa. Five years later a Welsh university lecturer, named Wolfgang Wüster illegally renamed it with his own coined name, falsely claiming to have discovered the species.
The damage caused by Wüster’s taxonomic vandalism cannot be understated as the species is dangerous to humans and confusion in identification can and will cause avoidable deaths.
Hoser says, pseudo-scientists and anti-scientists like Wuster are not only putting lives at risk, but wasting time of genuine scientists like himself who then have to waste time correcting their deliberate mistakes. This is time that could be better spent doing other things, including cataloguing other as yet unnamed species!
In years past it was difficult to ascertain whether or not a given potential new species had been named by another scientist. However now there are excellent so-called synonyms lists available and this makes the job of identifying unnamed species much easier and is one of the reasons that Hoser has been able to name so many new species.
Hoser said “If I wasn’t so tied up with my other critically important work doing educational wildlife displays, I could go out and name over 1,000 more reptile species within a few short years, if only I had the time to do so”.
Hoser hopes other scientists and scientists in training engage in the science of naming species and not just for reptiles, because as of 2018, most of the planet’s biological diversity remains unnamed and therefore at greater risk of extinction.
However Hoser warns, “If taxonomic vandals like Wolfgang Wuster are allowed to get away with stealing the works of others and then illegally renaming the same species, this will seriously deter conservation-minded people from putting in the necessary effort to discover and name new species in the first place”.
In 2018, Wolfgang Wüster simply lifted the work of the Hoser (2013) paper and repackaged it as his own in an online PRINO Journal called Zootaxa. PRINO is an acronym for the words, peer reviewed in name only, which is exactly how the online journal Zootaxa works.
The improper claim of formal peer review is made to enhance the alleged credibility of the paper by the taxonomic vandal, Wuster.
The International Commission of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN), who govern scientific names of animals, have had a serious problem in dealing with online journals such as Zootaxa which by using the online model, now make it easier for taxonomic vandals like Wuster to spread their toxic non-science more widely.
Wüster and his cohort, haven't just decided to steal the works of Raymond Hoser and falsely claim it as his own. His gang of thieves have attacked the works of dozens of other scientists, including the late John Edward Gray of the British Museum, who died about 150 years ago and therefore cannot defend his works from being stolen by Wuster's gang.
Fortunately other scientists will defend the science of zoology and have already taken steps to stop Wuster and like minded thieves from disrupting the science of taxonomy and the associated work of conservationists.
For example in 1991, in a near unanimous decision, the Wuster gang was stopped in their tracks by the International Commission for Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) trying to illegally rename hundreds of species and genera discovered and named by eminent Australian scientists Richard Wells and Ross Wellington, but this has not stopped his gang from still trying to do so.
In other words, taxonomic vandalism as practiced by Wolfgang Wuster will not only cause scientists like Raymond Hoser grief and time wasted, but also cause the extinction of species and even the science powerhouse Raymond Hoser cannot stop that!

Raymond Hoser is the Snakeman. Details of his work here.

20 June 2018 - Snake man Raymond Hoser discovers 20 more new species, including 8 Goannas and 2 species of Rattlesnake as well as 10 new genera, full list of his species/genus/family discoveries to date is here ...

15 May 2018 - Conservation of species: Why discovering and naming them is the critically important first step ...

28 April 2018 - Spectacular new species of large spiky lizard discovered in the Mount Isa area. ...

20 April 2018 - "Dry bite" lie by unsafe law-breaking imitators of the Snakeman Raymond Hoser needs to be junked before it claims more innocent victims. ...

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