[Taxacom] Important note Re: two names online published - one new species

Paul van Rijckevorsel dipteryx at freeler.nl
Mon Jan 25 12:18:00 CST 2016


A date consists of day, month and year (though not
necessarily in that order). I see no requirement to use
the exact wording "Date of publication", any format
that gets across that it concerns the date of publication
should do.

However, if you want to nitpick, there is the question
of the publication that indicates it is going to be
published on 4, 5, 6, 7 Jan. and is indeed published
on one of these days. Arguably, this provides the date
of publication plus three other dates.

It looks terribly untraditional and wrong but I see no
immediate argument as to why this should not be
Code-compliant?

Paul

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "John Noyes" <j.noyes at nhm.ac.uk>
To: "'Paul van Rijckevorsel'" <dipteryx at freeler.nl>; 
<taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu>
Cc: "'engel'"'" <msengel at ku.edu>
Sent: Monday, January 25, 2016 4:19 PM
Subject: RE: [Taxacom] Important note Re: two names online published - 
onenew species


> To be nitpicky does the date of publication have to be the actual date of 
> publication or just the year or month and year and does it have to be 
> preceded by "Date of publication"? Those angels are on the head of the pin 
> again!!
>
> John
>
> John Noyes
> Scientific Associate
> Department of Life Sciences
> Natural History Museum
> Cromwell Road
> South Kensington
> London SW7 5BD
> UK
> jsn at nhm.ac.uk
> Tel.: +44 (0) 207 942 5594
> Fax.: +44 (0) 207 942 5229
>
> Universal Chalcidoidea Database (everything you wanted to know about 
> chalcidoids and more):
> www.nhm.ac.uk/chalcidoids
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Taxacom [mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of 
> Paul van Rijckevorsel
> Sent: 25 January 2016 15:12
> To: taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
> Cc: 'engel'"'
> Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Important note Re: two names online published - one 
> new species
>
> I tried to avoid using big words. Article 8.5 states  "To be considered 
> published, a work issued and distributed
>  electronically must [...]
>      8.5.2. state the date of publication in the work itself, "
>
> This means that for a publication that states 4 Jan. as the date of 
> publication, there is a one-day window in which the work must actually be 
> published. And it can only be published if the ZooBank-entry is completely 
> in order at that moment. Once the window has closed, it can no longer be 
> published in a Code-compliant way. A new publication with a new date is 
> necessary (although in this case the print run will likely take care of 
> the problem, in the traditional way).
>
> That is what the Code says, quite explicitly. And this does make  sense.
>
> Paul
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Richard Pyle" <deepreef at bishopmuseum.org>
> To: "'Paul van Rijckevorsel'" <dipteryx at freeler.nl>; 
> <taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu>
> Cc: "'engel'"'" <msengel at ku.edu>
> Sent: Monday, January 25, 2016 2:01 PM
> Subject: RE: [Taxacom] Important note Re: two names online published - one 
> new species
>
>
>> A new publication (meeting the requirements of Article 8) is required
>> for the name to become available.
>
> Hmm... not sure I follow.  Let's assume the work itself was complete for 
> all requirements for e-Publication on 4 Jan, but the ZooBank record was 
> not complete (e.g., missing Archive) until 23 Jan. Are you saying that the 
> work is published in the sense of the Code on 23 Jan?  Or are you saying a 
> "new publication" is required?  If you follow the logic of Laurent (as I 
> do), then the work was not published in the sense of the Code from Jan 4 
> up until Jan 22, because the requirements for publication were not met 
> until Jan 23.
> Before that date, the work was not published in the sense of the Code.
> Hence, no need for a "new" publication.
>
> The only uncertainty (in my mind, anyway) is how to interpret and apply 
> the term "issued" as it is used in various articles of the Code.  For 
> example, Art. 8.1.2. says that a work "must be obtainable, when first 
> issued, free of charge or by purchase".  It refers to the unqualified 
> "work", not "published work".  So, in the example above, was it "first 
> issued" on 4 Jan, or on 23 Jan (in the sense of the Code)?  Presumably it 
> would have been obtainable free of charge or by purchase on both dates; 
> but it can only have been "first issued" on one date. Having looked at all 
> of the articles that include the word "issued", I'm reasonably certain 
> we're still OK following the "date of publication is the date on which all 
> criteria are met"
> approach, even with the "issued" business.  But I can also see how some 
> might argue otherwise.
>
> Once we get this publication date business sorted out, we can move on to 
> the next "big" question related to electronic publication: how best to 
> apply Art. 9.9. Lots of thorny semantics in that one....
>
> Aloha,
> Rich
>
>
>
>
>
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