standard practices in taxonomy biol447 26 january 2016

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Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

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Scientific name  Never use specific epithet alone  UC genus and LC species (even for patronym)  Italicize: Genus species Reverse if text in which Genus species is mentioned is italicized  Underline if hand-written Traditionally, no italics for higher taxa  Changing?  Abbreviation after first use: Genus species, then G. species  Except at beginning of sentence  Ambiguous ref.: Genus sp. or Genus spp.

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Page 1: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Standard Practices in Taxonomy

BIOL44726 January 2016

Page 2: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Properly Writing Taxonomic Names

Page 3: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Scientific name Never use specific epithet alone UC genus and LC species (even for patronym) Italicize: Genus species

Reverse if text in which Genus species is mentioned is italicized

Underline if hand-written Traditionally, no italics for higher taxa

Changing? Abbreviation after first use:

Genus species, then G. species Except at beginning of sentence

Ambiguous ref.: Genus sp. or Genus spp.

Page 4: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Subspecies name Italicized trinomial Abbreviation:

1st use: Genus species subspecies Subsequently: G. s. subspecies

Ambiguous reference: Genus species ssp. Subspecific intergrade

Genus species subspecies x subspecies

Page 5: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

HANDOUT—Conant and Collins 1991 Rana areolata

Rana areolata areolata

Rana areolata circulosa

Rana areolata areolata circulosa

Rana capito Rana capito capito

Rana capito aesopus

Rana capito sevosa

Rana capito sevosa aesopus

Page 6: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Standardized endings for higher taxa Zoology: superfamily (-oidea)

family (-idae) subfamily (-inae) tribe (-ini)

Botany: standardized endings exist from phylum to family

Page 7: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Subgenus names Genus (Subgenus) species

Ex: Cooter and redbelly turtle genus

Pseudemys (Pseudemys) =

the cooters

Pseudemys (Ptychemys) = the redbellies

Pseudemys (Pseudemys) concinna

Pseudemys (Ptychemys) rubriventris

Page 8: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Including author name(s) Genus species Author 1894

Author name in parentheses if moved to a different genus

Genus Author 1795 Familyidae Author 1961 Famous taxonomists of yore have

standard abbrs. (e.g., L. for Linnaeus, Raf. for Constantine Rafinesque)

Page 9: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Miscellaneous rules Do not use "the" with scientific name All higher taxa are plural

Ex: The Coloeptera are, not the Coleoptera is Anglicize/LC any Latin name above genus

and subgenus Ex: Members of the Trionychidae are

called trionychids. Plurals:

species species (sp. spp.) genus genera

phylum phyla

Page 10: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Codes of Nomenclature

Page 11: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

International Codeof Zoological Nomenclature Separate codes for bacteria, plants, and

animals Protistan biologists must be familiar with latter

two Preamble: "The object of the Code is to

promote stability and universality in the scientific names of animals, and to ensure that each name is unique and distinct. All its provisions are subservient to these ends."

Page 12: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Priority

Page 13: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Taxonomic priority Oldest available name is valid name for a species

or higher taxon Date of publication hence very important

Begins with 1758 in zoology (1753 in botany) To be available, must be published in ink on

paper in scientific source available free or by purchase; does not qualify if… …microfilm or microfiche …personal distribution …mention at a conference …specimen labelling …anonymous publication …electronic files

Page 14: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Synonyms and Homonyms

Page 15: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Synonyms Senior synonym—oldest available name

for a taxon, and thus its valid name Junior synonym(s)—all subsequently-

published names for the same taxon Objective synonyms—based on same

specimens Subjective synonyms—based on

different type material (far more common)

Page 16: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Fixing synonymy Reviser may synonymize two taxa, with

the older name having priority Junior synonym is unavailable name (may not

be applied to other taxa) Complete listing of synonyms is important

in a taxonomic revision

Page 17: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Homonyms Two identical names for different taxa Senior homonym—earlier use Junior homonym(s)—later application(s)

to other taxa May occur as a result of taxonomic

lumping (i.e., two genera happen to have species with same specific epithet) Primary homonym—name used twice;

second author unaware of first use Secondary homonym—use of same specific

epithet in two genera that are later combined

Page 18: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Fixing homonymy Junior homonyms must be renamed

Use oldest available junior synonym if there is one

If not, usually original author (if living) is informed and given chance to propose new name in a short published article

Page 19: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Ollotis, not Cranopsis—Frost et al., 2006

Page 20: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Esselenichthys, not Esselenia—Anderson, 2003

Page 21: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Proper Latin in the Names of Species

Page 22: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Gender in genus and species combinations Latin rules followed to keep genus and

species in same gender When a species changes its genus name, it

may have to change its emendation Ex: Sternotherus carinatus, S. odoratus, S.

depressus, and S. minor became Kinosternon carinatum, K. odoratum, K. depressum, and K. minor

(Since reverted to Sternotherus) Movement to dump emendation rules has,

so far, been fended off

Page 23: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Patronyms Honor someone other than author of the

species Male honoree: -i (or, in older literature,

often –ii ) Female honoree: -ae Group with one or more males: -orum Group of females: -arum

Page 24: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Graptemys caglei Haynes & McKown 1974

Page 25: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Glyptemys muhlenbergii (Schoepf 1801)

Named for naturalist G.H.E. Muhlenberg,a Pennsylvania botanist (1753-1815) whostudied wetland plants and collected thetype specimen

Page 26: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Heloderma horridum charlesbogertiCampbell & Vanzolini 1988

Page 27: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Amphisbaena carlgansi Thomas & Hedges 1998

Page 28: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Uraetyphlus oommeniGower & Wilkinson 2007

Page 29: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Hyla stingi Kaplan 1994

Page 30: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Menetia koshlandae Greer 1991Menetia sadlieri Greer 1991

Page 31: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Microcebus berthae Rasoloarison, Goodman, & Ganzhorn 2000

Page 32: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Hesperarion mariae Branson 1991

Page 33: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Hyla allenorum Duellman & Trueb 1989

“Sunk” as junior synonym of Dendrosophus timbeba (Martins and Cardosa 1987) in 2013

Page 34: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Anolis datzorum Köhler, Ponce, & Batista 2007

Page 35: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Gymnotes omarorum Richer-de-Forges, Crampton, & Albert 2009

Page 36: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Eurycea sosorumChippindale, Price, & Hillis 1993

Page 37: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Cuora chriskarannarumErnst & McCord 1987

Since “sunk” as junior synonymof Cuora pani

Page 38: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Geographical place names Generally end with

–ensis, –iensis, –inus, –icus, or –ense Exs: Castor canadensis

Alligator mississippiensis

Alligator sinensisSciurus carolinensis

Page 39: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Types

Page 40: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type taxa Types bear names Necessary because taxonomic revision is

so common Separate species synonymized Species-group taxa are lumped or split with

new phylogenetic analyses

Page 41: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type taxa A family has a type genus, with a similar

name Exs: Hylidae Hyla (tree frogs)

Emydidae Emys (European pond turtle)

Ursidae Ursus (bears)Salmonidae Salmo (salmon)

Page 42: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type taxa If a family is subsequently split into two or

more, name remains with new family that contains type genus Ex: Emydidae Emydidae (contains Emys)

and Geoemydidae (from type genus, Geoemyda)

Reduced Emydidae since divided into Emydinae (type Emys) and Deirochelyinae (type Deirochelys)

Page 43: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type taxa Each genus has a type

species Sometimes (not always)

with a specific epithet such as typicus, typus, vulgaris, or same name as genus Exs: Rattus rattus

Gorilla gorillaIguana iguanaGulo gulo

Page 44: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type taxa There is always one nominate

subspecies (if subspecies are designated) Exs: Gorilla gorilla beringi

G. g. graueriG. g. gorilla

Gulf CoastApalone mutica calvata

MidlandA. m. mutica

Page 45: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type taxa Suggestion: name type from largest

cluster of subtaxa within group, so that least nomenclatural change would occur upon revision

Page 46: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type specimens Holotype—taxonomic anchor for revision; a

single specimen so designated Type locality—exact geographic locality where the

holotype was collected Syntypes (=cotypes)—series of specimens on

which description was based, prior to requirement of single holotype

Lectotype—single syntype later designated as the (holotype-like) taxonomic anchor for the species

Neotype—designated type specimen if the holo-, syn-, and/or lectotypes are all lost or destroyed; only designated if other species within the genus make such action necessary

Page 47: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

The lectotype of Homo sapiens? See Blunt p. 247 Linnaeus’ 1758 description: Homo nosce

te ipsum (Man, know yourself) Linnaeus’ remains entombed in Uppsala

Cathedral—our lectotype?

Page 48: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Type specimens Topotypes—collected at type locality (no

taxonomic standing) Paratypes—other specimens examined by the

author of a name (no taxonomic standing) Paratopotypes—both of above Paralectotypes (=Lectoparatypes)—syntypes

not assigned lectotype status Part of original series examined, just not anchors

Allotype—sometimes applied to a single member of opposite sex of holotype, if sexual dimorphism is pronounced (no taxonomic standing)

Page 49: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Plenary Powersof the ICZN

Page 50: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Application to suppress a senior synonym or change spelling of a taxon name Exs: Alligator mississippiensis (originally one p

missing)Iguana iguana (Linnaeus originally named it

Iguana igvana)Lampropeltis Fitzinger 1850; one species later

found to be included, and had been placed originally in Phibolus Hervey 1842

Geochelone nigra (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824)First named Testudo californiana Quoy & Gaimard 1824, then Testudo nigra Quoy & Gaimard 1824 (later switched to genus Geochelone)—24 April vs. 18 Sept.

Former name never used—petition filed to suppress it

Page 51: Standard Practices in Taxonomy BIOL447 26 January 2016

Readings for Next Time Schuh & Brower: None Winston: 55-93 Additional: C through I

Some recent examples of new species description—to skim lightly: C. Branson, B.A. 1991. Hesperarion mariae (Gastropoda: Arionidae:

Ariolimacinae), a new slug species from Oregon. Transactions of the Kentucky Academy of Science 52:109110.

D. Neely, D.A., J.D. Williams, and R.L. Mayden. 2007. Two new sculpins of the genus Cottus (Teleostei: Cottidae) from rivers of eastern North America. Copeia 2007:641655.

E. Campbell, J.A., J.C. Blancas-Hernández, and E.N. Smith. 2009. A new species of stream-breeding treefrog of the genus Charadrahyla (Hylidae) from the Sierra Madre del Sur of Guerrero, Mexico. Copeia 2009:287295.

F. Thomson, S., and A. Georges. 2016. A new species of freshwater turtle of the genus Elseya (Testudinata: Pleurodira: Chelidae) from the Northern Territory of Australia. Zootaxa 4061:1828.

G. Athreya, R . 2006. A new species of Liocichla (Aves: Timaliidae) from Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, Arunachal Pradesh, India. Indian Birds 2:8294.

H. Cozzoul, M.A., C.L. Clozato, E.C. Holanda, F.H.G. Rodrigues, S. Nienow, B. de Thoisy, R.A F. Redondo, and F.R. Santos. 2013. A new species of tapir from the Amazon. Journal of Mammalogy 94:13311345.

I. Dokuchaev, N.E. 1997. A new species of shrew (Soricidae, Insectivora) from Alaska. Journal of Mammalogy 78:811817.