[Taxacom] Unexpectedly wide discrepancies in cited taxon authorities - examples sought
Dan Lahr
daniel.lahr at gmail.com
Sat Mar 3 18:22:29 CST 2012
Not exactly in error Paul, you describe the most common case, but there
are too many exceptions.
At least in Brazil, there is not necessarily a rule that the last or second
to last name is more important (you guys were discussing first or second
but people often have more than only two last names). The majority of
people do use the very last name, but I suspect it is only a simple
majority as there is a very large amount of people using other combinations.
Dan (or Daniel José Galafasse Lahr)
On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 11:52 PM, Paul Kirk <p.kirk at cabi.org> wrote:
> and in Portuguese surnames it's the reverse, the second is the important
> one ... unless I am in error.
>
> Paul
> ________________________________________
> From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu [
> taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] on behalf of Stephen Thorpe [
> stephen_thorpe at yahoo.co.nz]
> Sent: 02 March 2012 23:41
> To: Tony.Rees at csiro.au; taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
> Cc: dmozzherin at eol.org
> Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Unexpectedly wide discrepancies in cited taxon
> authorities - examples sought
>
> Spanish names are often confusing, because they often have two surnames,
> one of which (the second) is optional, and the first often gets cited as if
> it were a middle name
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: "Tony.Rees at csiro.au" <Tony.Rees at csiro.au>
> To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
> Cc: dmozzherin at eol.org
> Sent: Saturday, 3 March 2012 12:18 PM
> Subject: [Taxacom] Unexpectedly wide discrepancies in cited taxon
> authorities - examples sought
>
> Dear Taxacomers,
>
> In the process of comparing taxonomic names across multiple lists I
> frequently encounter minor discrepancies in cited authorities, as you would
> expect (over and above simple abbreviated names vs. names spelled out in
> full, presence/absence of initials and ancillary terms, etc.), which I
> attempt to reflect in an "authority similarity" portion of my cross mapping
> routines for taxonomic names. However there is the occasional spectacular
> mismatch for a good reason, which I would like to also account for if
> possible, so that taxa which are in fact the same do not get artificially
> separated by this process. I have two examples in mind, and am hoping
> persons on this list might be able to suggest others if they exist.
>
> The first example is probably symptomatic of a class of authors with
> multi-part names, or alternative forms of representation: I am thinking
> here of the 19th century naturalist [Francis de] Laporte de Castelnau,
> whose taxa are variously ascribed to either Laporte or Castelnau, or
> sometime both (i.e. the full name). [Jean Baptiste] Bory de Saint-Vincent
> is probably another similar case, being represented either as Bory, Bory de
> Saint-Vincent (or St.-Vincent), or just Saint-Vincent.
>
> The second class is exemplified by the taxa described in the 1798 work
> "Museum Boltenianum...", originally attributed to Bolten, 1798 but more
> recently to Röding, 1798 (or [Röding], 1798) following an ICZN ruling on
> the matter: thus for this purpose, the author attributions Bolten and
> Röding are effectively interchangeable for data cross-mapping purposes in
> these cases.
>
> I would be interested in other examples of these classes of "authority
> synonyms" which, if sufficiently noteworthy, I could encode into
> rules/special cases to be followed before doing the remainder of my
> authority matching.
>
> Regards,
>
> Tony Rees
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--
Daniel J. G. Lahr, PhD
Post-Doctoral Research Associate, Dept. of Zoology
University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
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