Document of bibliographic reference 392824

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Nomenclatural stability and the longevity of helminth species names
Abstract
Although most Latin binomial names of species are valid, many are eventually unaccepted when they are found to be synonyms of previously described species, or superseded by a new combination when the species they denote are moved to a different genus. What proportion of parasite species names become unaccepted over time, and how long does it take for incorrect names to become unaccepted? Here, we address these questions using a dataset comprising thousands of species names of parasitic helminths from four higher taxa (Acanthocephala, Nematoda, Cestoda, and Trematoda). Overall, among species names proposed in the past two-and-a-half centuries, nearly one-third have since been unaccepted, the most common reason being that they have been superseded by a new combination. A greater proportion of older names (proposed pre-1950) have since been unaccepted compared to names proposed more recently, however most taxonomic acts leading to species names being unaccepted (through either synonymy or reclassification) occurred in the past few decades. Overall, the average longevity of helminth species names that are currently unaccepted was 29 years; although many remained in use for over 100 years, about 50% of the total were invalidated within 20 years of first being proposed. The patterns observed were roughly the same for all four higher helminth taxa considered here. Our results provide a quantitative illustration of the self-correcting nature of parasite taxonomy, and can also help to calibrate future estimates of total parasite biodiversity.
Bibliographic citation
Poulin, R.; Presswell, B. (2024). Nomenclatural stability and the longevity of helminth species names. Syst. Parasitol. 101(3): 34. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11230-024-10161-4
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Robert Poulin
author
Name
Bronwen Presswell

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11230-024-10161-4

Document metadata

date created
2024-06-19
date modified
2024-06-19