Well OK chaps if you say so....
The vast majority of my photos are in colour but occasionally something definitely screams " gotta be mono" - often at the point of taking the shot but sometimes back at the desk when a crop or a contrast slide brings up interesting possibilities
Your thoughts above prompted me to seek online if there are any "rules" (ha ha!!) for mono. Words bandied frequently were texture, shape, clarity, contrast & light/shadow.
To that I will add my favourite photography word-------
impact ! You've only got a moment to impress the viewer, there are a trillion other photos out there.
So in my book anything that gets that impact is what makes it work. I'd certainly agree with your generalisation about flowers and wildlife whilst totally accepting there are some stunning exceptions
I'm idly wondering why we see so many superb people portraits in B&W and maybe it's the imperfections (such as wrinkles) or the model's expression that adds to the impact.
Anyway I shall follow your post on B&W examples Manfred with great interest and maybe add an example or two ..