Generally speaking, version-specific tags should only exist when:
- There are major backwards-incompatible differences between versions, and
- Both versions of the software continue to be used by the developer community.
In theoryessence, there should be questions you could ask where the answer would be completelyregularly asked about both versions, with significantly different answers depending on which version you asked about.
In the case of Perl, most of these tags should not exist.
perl4 refers to a version of the language that has been obsolete since 1994. While it passes the first test, as Perl 5 introduced a lot of major new features that didn't exist in Perl 4, it completely fails the second test: there is effectively no Perl 4 developer community in existence. There have only ever been two questions created with this tag in the history of this site, both from users who have the misfortune to be working on extremely old systems.
perl5 is essentially synonymous with perl in common usage, as it is the only major version of Perl regularly used by developers. As I am not a moderator, I cannot suggest that they be set up as synonyms; I would appreciate it if someone with the appropriate rights could do that!
Tags for major revisions of Perl 5 (e.g, perl5.8, perl5.10, etc) fail the first test: the differences between these versions are relatively minor. Changes which break backwards incompatibility are rare, and usually involve the deprecation of long-obsolete features. As such, these tags should be merged to the parent perl tag. Most of the questions tagged with them are either asking questions about code which is running on that version of Perl, or are asking questions about new features introduced in a particular version. The former are typically not specific to athe version at all, and the latter are typically equally applicable to any later version (e.g,: an answer explaining a feature introduced in Perl 5.10 will usually also apply to 5.12 or later.)
perl6 should stay. Perl 6 is a completely separate language from Perl 5; it's related to Perl 5 in the same sort of way that C++ is related to C. Questions tagged as perl6 should generally not be tagged as perl unless they're specifically asking about converting or bridging between the two.