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1 Some Common Taxonomic Errors by R. E. BLACKWELDER Department of Zoology Southern Illinois University Carbondale, Illinois 62901 Textbooks of general biology and zoology are more numerous today than ever before. Many of the recent ones are heavily or completely slanted toward biochemical, genetical, and developmental aspects, but many still retain at least an introduction to the animal kingdom. Some are still largely devoted to comparisons of the groups of organisms. Among all these, there stand out a small number in which the taxonomic aspects are accurately treated. Glaring errors in the use of taxonomic terms, devices, or ideas are found in others, being repeated in the same form from text to text. Only occasionally do taxonomists find the time to criticize these practices. In teaching taxonomy, it is found to be difficult to eradicate the false usages to be found in the usual beginning text. It is hardly to be hoped that the unsatisfactory practices will be stopped if published criticism is not available to the writers of such texts, who are usually not experienced taxonomists. A series of common errors is given below, with explanations of what is wrong and how it may be put correctly. (1) Most textbooks contain such a diagram or list as this: Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Mammalia Order Primates Family Genus Species 50 • Turtox News Hominidae Homo sapiens This is called the classification of man. Although such use of the word classification might perhaps be condoned if it were appropriate or meaningful, it is in fact neither. It does not classify or group; it merely lists. It is in fact a hierarchy of groups to which this species has been assigned. (2) A few texts carry this diagram in correct form, in which the last item is written: Homo sapiens Species This is the only correct form, because sapiens is not the name of anything; it is merely a Latin word. It is true that many persons, including the authors of the latest code of nomenclature, have called this word the specific name, but all are in agreement that it is not the name of the species. The name of the species is binominal, a two-part name, always including the generic name as its first part. No animal (individual) "belongs to" sapiens, but it is reasonable to say that all modem humans belong to Homo sapiens. There is only one situation in which it is ever possible to refer to a species by the second part of its name alone: If two species are referred to many times in a work, and they are referred to first as Fells leo and Fells tigris, they may be shortened to leo and tigris thereafter with the understanding that this is merely a matter of convenience, that the Fells is understood in every case. Even this is technically in error, for not even the lessabbreviated form F. leo is recommended by any rules. (There have been zoologists who insist that their students must always use the name of the author after the name of the species, as part of the name. This is often appropriate but never required by rule. It should be done only when this reference to the original publication would be helpful to the reader. In almost all non-technical literature, it is neither necessary nor helpful and may be omitted.) Vol. 46, No. 2, February, 1968 (c:l) 1968, General Biological Supply House, Inc. (3) In presenting this diagram, some texts state that each phylum is divided into subphyla, each class into orders, each order into families, and each genus into species. This is not unreasonable at the level of phylum and class, but at the levels or genus and family, at least, the more inclusive groups are not normally subdivided to produce the lower ones but are built up by combining the lower ones —by grouping them. Genera are made by combining species, and families are made by combining genera. There are situations that produce exceptions, but the general statement at these lower levels must be that each is formed by combining ones from the level below. There is a large class of exceptions formed by the sublevels. Subfamilies are usually thought of as formed by dividing a family. The family, however, is hardly ever formed by dividing an order and never by dividing a superfamily. (4) It has become common in newspapers to put a nickname in parenthesis between the parts of a person's name, as: John ("Pretty-boy") Doe. Perhaps it is this custom that has led to a resurgence of an occasional old practice of putting a generic synonym in parenthesis in the middle of the dual name of a species, as: Clonorchis (Opisthorchis) sinensis. Although the rules of nomenclature have not specifically forbidden this practice, they have in effect done so. For fifty years the method of citing the subgenus, when desired, is by use of parentheses between the two parts of the name of the species. Thus, this device is pre-empted, and a name in this middle and parenthetical position is presumed to be a subgenus, not a synonym. The synonym can be cited after the full correct name, thus: Clonorchis sinensis (Opisthorchis sinensis (In any case it is assumed that Clonorchis is the genus accepted by the writer.) It will be much clearer to a student if the name is written in the form believed to Vol. 46, No. 2, February, 1968 be correct, and a note added that it has sometimes been placed under a specified other generic name. (5) When a species has been given two or more names, there enters the problem of synonymy. It is sometimes stated that the rejected names are synonyms. In fact, the names given to any species are all synonyms. From among the synonyms, one is determined according to special rules to be the correct name. The rejected synonyms should be called just that. (6) The International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature has at various times had power to interpret the rules, to suspend them individually, and to propose new ones. It has never had the power to lay down rules or to enforce them. The power to make rules or revise them resides solely in the International Congress of Zoology, although the Commission's recommendations are usually accepted by that body. No one can enforce the rules, which take effect only through weight of public opinion among taxonomists. These matters are frequently misstated in general texts. (7) It is a very common thing in textbooks at all levels to see a figure of "Hydra" or "Lumbricus." It is clear that Hydra, a genus, can have no tentacles and that Lumbricus, another genus, can have no clitellum; it is impossible to draw a genus. It is equally impossible to draw a species, Lumbricus terrestris. There is no question that the authors of these books understand this; they are merely taking a short-cut to keep from repeating "Diagram of a specimen of Lumbricus terrestris." When the generic name stands alone, the full form would be "Diagram of a specimen of some unspecified species of Lumbricus." No real harm is done by this shortened form, but it has been found that it is not self-explanatory to students. A note of explanation would be worthwhile. (8) A widespread misuse of terms has given rise to much confusion in speaking about groups in a hierarchy of levels. The common expression "It is in quite a different category. . ." has been carried over Turtox 'News • 51 into taxonomy so that groups are called categories. For example, "Taxonomic categories are the outcome of changing concepts of classification. . ." Many things in taxonomy do change, but the categories are not among them. It is the groups which change. Categories are merely the levels in the hierarchy, such as the order category (level). The groups, at this level are called orders. The level (or category) doesn't change, but the groups (the actual orders) may be moved to other categories or levels. The groups are now often called taxa. They should never be confused with the categories of the hierarchy. (9) Most texts refer to zoological nomenclature as a system of binominal names, and of course the Linnaean system is binominal. But zoological names are given to groups placed in at least twenty levels in the hierarchy; names of groups (taxa) at only one of these twenty levels are binominal. At one level the names are trinominal, and at all other levels the names are uninominal. The Linnaean binominal system consists merely of the names of species, so zoological nomenclature merely includes binominal names at a particular level. (10) In addition to the above strictly taxonomic usages, there are some things that involve features of the animals that are used in taxonomy. Because it is obviously impossible to deal with all kinds of organisms, many of the texts give most of their attention to "typical representatives" or "representative types." These are unfortunate expressions, because the animals usually are not typical and do not represent the entire group. They are examples, so why imply more. For example, in the Nematoda the example cited is usually Ascaris lumbricoides, the common laboratory nematode. It happens to be a hundred times longer than most nematodes, a thousand times longer than many. No parasitic nematode can be representative of the thousands of soil-dwelling ones. Helix pomatia is often cited in the Gastropoda; yet as a pulmonate land snail it can represent only the one aberrant group among the immense 52 • Turtox 'News diversity of this second-largest class of animals. Hydra oligactis is almost universally cited in the Coelenterata; yet even in its class, this species is highly unusual in being solitary, not polymorphic, and without the usual tetramerous arrangement. It is, of course, necessary to limit descriptions to a few, but it is highly misleading to imply that those chosen are representative or typical. It would be better to state, if true, that they show the fundamental features of their group. (11) Most recent texts make some use of the ideas of symmetry: radial, bilateral, and sometimes biradial. None of these books succeeds in making any useful point of these ideas. The reason is simply that whatever there is that is basic about these body arrangements is so obscured by diversity, that no story is apparent. A variety of simple definitions are given such as: radial symmetry—several parts arranged around a central point; biradial symmetry—several parts arranged opposite each other; bilateral symmetry—two parts arranged opposite each other. A nautilus shell has several parts arranged around a central point, but it is not radially symmetrical. Most "biradial" ctenophores (the only examples) have some organs clearly bilateral and some clearly radial. Most diatoms have two parts (valves) arranged opposite to each other without being bilateral in this plane, and to call both a crayfish and a cup-shaped bryozoan bilateral makes a mockery of this word as descriptive of body arrangement. The solution is to abandon this useless idea until it is usefully restated. (12) The adjectives "true" and "false" are used in naming organs of several types. When an animal with a solid body, like a flatworm perhaps, evolved a body cavity to surround the viscera, could this new invention, a superior development, be called a false coelom or false body cavity? Whatever term we wish to use for it, it was a true one, a real one. It is unfortunate that the term chosen was pseudocoel, by persons familiar with a still-moreadvanced body cavity already known as a Vol. 46, No. 2, February, 1968 coelom. The pseudocoel is not a false coelom, nor a false body cavity; it is a true pseudocoel. The words true and false are completely inappropriate in all such terms. (13) There is probably no end to the general statements that are made in spite of the fact that exceptions are known to exist. This is not always bad, if no conclusions are drawn. In the classification of animals, there is one subdivision of the coelomate Metazoa made on the basis of a feature that once appeared clear-cut. This is the method of formation of the coelom, giving rise to the groups Enterocoela and Schizocoela, depending on whether the coelom arose from the archenteron or by a split in the mesoderm. Without going into the developmental sequences, it is now clear that the enterocoelous condition occurs in many species in one group always listed as schizocoelous (Brachiopoda), and the schizocoelous method of formation occurs in one of the classes (Ayes) always listed as enterocoelous. There are many groups in which the condition is unknown. At present this feature cannot be used for the purpose of setting up two subgroups of coelomate animals. It should be dropped completely from beginning texts, unless it is to be used to illustrate how an unfounded generalization can lead one astray. These remarks are not intended to be critical of the efforts of the writers of beginning textbooks, whose problems are already legion. They cannot be specialists in all the fields on which they must write, and there is frequently no apparent reason why they should not use an expression or a device used by many previous writers of the same sort of book. It will make their book more accurate, more understandable to the student, and more useful to him in later courses if these things are dealt with in defensible and meaningful manner. Summary 1. A list or diagram of the groups into which a certain species is placed is not a "classification" of that species but a hierarchy of its groups. Vol. 46, No. 2, February, 1968 2. At the base of this hierarchical list, the name of the species must always be a binomen—the genus name must be repeated. 3. Genera are never subdivided into species. They consist of one or more species, but in this context they are made by assembling species into a group. The same goes for families. 4. Never put a synonym in parentheses between the two parts of the name of the species. Only the subgeneric name can go there. 5. All names given to any one taxon are synonyms. Refer to the rejected ones as rejected synonyms. 6. Don't overstate the power of the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. The rules of nomenclature originate only in actions of the International Congress of Zoology. 7. If a single generic name is used in referring to a figure, be sure that it is understood that it is not a figure of Drosophila, for example, but of a specimen of some one species of this genus. 8. Species are assembled into groups called taxa. Each taxon is assigned to a level in the hierarchy. Only the levels are categories. The category "order" contains the taxa considered to be orders. 9. Names at only one of the twenty or more levels are binominal. Thus zoological nomenclature is not a binominal system but includes a system of binominal names for species. 10. Don't label any species as typical or representative. 11. Avoid the subject of symmetry, unless it can be made meaningful. 12. Never use the adjectives "true" and "false" in describing features of organisms. 13. Use schizocoel and enterocoel in classification only if you are sure the facts you give justify such use. Turtox 'News • 53 ft P5.125 P5.12I P5.123 Interesting Slides Fasciola hepatica, probably the best known of all flukes, was the first digenetic trematode in which the life cycle was completely worked out. In a sense the cycle is unusual because the encysted metacercarial stage occurs on vegetation (in water) and not within one of the hosts. Eggs from 54 • Turtox GNews the adults in the liver pass into the alimentary tract via the bile ducts and pass out with the feces. After being in water from about four days to two weeks the ciliated miracidium escapes from the shell and swims about and penetrates a compatible snail. Vol. 46, No. 2, February, 1968