valid genus or nomen nudum?
Barry Roth
barry_roth at YAHOO.COM
Wed May 29 15:18:19 CDT 2002
I'll give it a shot:
Given the date of the publication, I would say that this qualifies as the proposal of an available genus-group name, Evaniella. Evaniella is not a nomen nudum because it contains two available species referred to it. Either of the originally referred species, neomexicana or californica, would be available for subsequent designation as the type-species. Although the author declared that the "type" was E. unicolor sensu Ashmead, non Say, that species is not available as of the date of the present publication and is therefore not a candidate for type-species of Evaniella.
Anybody else?
Cheers,
Barry
Andy Deans <adeans at LIFE.UIUC.EDU> wrote: Hi all,
I have a technical ICZN question concerning the evaniid (Hymenoptera) genus
Evaniella as described by Bradley in 1905. Here is the text all subsequent
papers (including Bradleys later papers) refer to as the original generic
description:
Evania neomexicana and E. californica belong to a new genus which I shall
shortly describe under the name Evaniella. Here also belongs and stands as
the type the species which Dr. Ashmead (1901) calls unicolor, Say, but is
not that species. Says description applies to E. appendigaster, which
could easily have spread into the interior with the early settlers,
inasmuch as it is parasitic on cockroaches.
This does not sound like a valid description to me, but rather a nomen
nudum. Bradley transfers two described species (Evania neomexicana Ashmead
and Evania californica Ashmead) to the new genus Evaniella, but he
designates a type species which is not even described until 1908
Evaniella semaeoda Bradley. We dont find out until Bradleys 1908 paper
that this is the species Ashmead thought was Evania unicolor.
In 1908 Bradley describes the genus in a more typical fashion with a
detailed morphological report, key to species, description of the new
species E. semaeoda, and mention of that species as the type for the
genus. He refers to his 1905 paper as the original description though.
Any ideas? Thanks!
Andy
Ashmead, W. H. 1901. Canadian Entomologist 33: 302-4.
Bradley, J. C. 1905. Canadian Entomologist 37: 63-64.
Bradley, J. C. 1908. Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. 34: 101-194.
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