birding-aus

Taxonomy question

To: David James <>
Subject: Taxonomy question
From: Carl Clifford <>
Date: Sun, 22 Jan 2012 16:25:29 +1100
First use was by Bonaparte in 1855.

Carl Clifford


On 22/01/2012, at 3:35 PM, David James wrote:

'I dout that 'v-nigrum' (meaning black V) would be a valid subspecific name under the zoological nomenclature code. Perhaps the v indicates that nigrum is the name of the variety rather than a subspecies. Varietly is a category lower than subspecies which is used frequently in botany but not usually in zoology. an antiquated name perhaps?


David James,
in Jakarta

==============================


________________________________
From: Dave Torr <>
To: Andrew Hobbs <>
Cc: 
Sent: Sunday, 22 January 2012 10:56 AM
Subject: Taxonomy question

Thanks Andrew - that makes sense and advances my knowledge. Will now allow
for such forms in my software.

On 22 January 2012 10:51, Andrew Hobbs <> wrote:

On 22/01/2012 6:40 AM, Dave Torr wrote:

Hi

I am working on a spreadsheet that correlates the latest IOC 3e list (with
subspecies) to the relevant pages in the HBW volumes - should have it
finished in a week or so if anyone wants a copy.

Anyway - I have found that a subspecies of Common Eider is listed as
*Somateria
mollissima v-nigrum* which is confusing me as I thought all components
were

"simple" words - my software certainly did not expect a hyphen in the
middle of a component. It is also listed (as *v-nigra*) on the Avibase

system. Anyone have an explanation for this?

Thanks


I suspect that the v-nigra stands for a black V shape visible in the
feather pattern; see

http://iczn.org/content/what-**correct-original-spelling<http://iczn.org/content/what-correct-original-spelling >

However hyphens in species/subspecies names are not unusual; see

http://iczn.org/content/code-**relationship-2831<http://iczn.org/content/code-relationship-2831 >

http://iczn.org/content/code-**relationship-170<http://iczn.org/content/code-relationship-170 >

Cheers

Andrew


Dave
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