[Taxacom] Species-level homonyms - between/within codes
Francisco Welter-Schultes
fwelter at gwdg.de
Thu Nov 11 05:22:51 CST 2010
For scientific names of organisms I would use the term honomym like
Steven proposed it, just in the sense of an available name of the
same spelling used for a different organism. For the bioinformatician
who has to disambiguate such names it makes no difference how many
Codes exist and whether the homonyms are allowed under some of
these Codes or not. The bioinformatician has also to deal with names
that are misspelled or not allowed, by the way. As a bioinformatician
I would also call a misspelled name of one organism a homonym of
a correctly spelled name of another organism, if the spelling is the
name.
I would pretty much favour a new provision in the next
edition of the zoological Code to restrict from then on establishing
new genus-group names in zoology if the same name is already that of
a genus under another Code. I am asking myself why such a provision
has not already been inserted, but I suspect that this is simply
because those taxonomists who were responsible for editing the
ICZN Code have not yet been aware of the opportunities of electronic
resources in the field of biodiversity studies.
The ICZN Code has a need to define the term "homonym" for the
purposes of zoological nomenclature. I see this as a special
definition for this purpose, also also regard such a definition as
necessary and justified. But I do not see that this definition makes
that sense exclusive for its general use in bioinformatics. I would
not invent new terms, I would keep using this term homonym, also for
interdisciplinary homonyms, just supporting Steven's position.
Francisco
University of Goettingen, Germany
www.animalbase.org
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