INTERNATIONAL CODE FOR ZOOLOGICAL NOMENCLATURE
TAXONOMIC TOOLS & NAMING
SYSTEMATICS
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INTERNATIONAL CODE OF ZOOLOGICAL NOMENCLATURE [ICZN] GOPIKA V NAIR 1 ST MSc ZOOLOGY MAHATMA GANDHI COLLEGE, THIRUVANANTHAPURAM
Widely accepted convention of zoology that rules the formal scientific naming of animals. Also known as ICZN Code. Published by International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature [ICZN] takes its power from International Union of Biological Sciences [IUBS ] . Ensures that every animal has a unique & universally accepted scientific name. WHAT IS ICZN?
System of rules & recommendations Fundamental Goal : provide maximum continuity in the naming of all animals with Uniqueness Universality & Stability Guide only the nomenclature of animals, leaves zoologist the freedom in classifying new taxa. WHAT IS ICZN?
First introduced by a British ornithologist, zoologist & palaeontologist Hugh E. Strickland , conceived a code for introducing uniformity in international nomenclature it was modified & evolved to the present systems 1 st edition - 1961 4 th edition – 1999 ICZN is independent from other nomenclature systems like Botanical nomenclature (ICBN). E.g. : Fig Shell (Gastropod animal) & Fig Tree (Plant) Genus Abronia in both plants & animals BRIEF HISTORY
Consist of 3 main parts : The Code Proper Includes ‘Preamble’ followed by 90 consecutively numbered ‘Article’ grouped in 18 chapters. Appendices 3 appendices, first 2 having status of recommendations & 3 rd is the constitution of the Commission. Glossary Terms used in the text are clearly defined in the ‘Glossary’. PARTS OF ICZN
The rules principally regulate : How names are correctly established in the frame of binomial nomenclature. Which name must be used in case of name conflicts. How scientific literature must cite names . PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
There are six basic principles : Principle of binomial nomenclature. Principle of priority. Principle of co-ordination. Principle of the first reviser. Principle of homonymy. Principle of typification. PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
PRINCIPLE OF BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE Name of species is composed of a combination of two name (Binomen). Generic name Specific Epithet E.g. Homo sapiens Rules for Binomial Nomenclature Names must either be Latin or Latinised. 1 st letter of genus name - capital 1 st letter of species name – small While typing – names italicized. When written with free hands – names separately underlined. PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
PRINCIPLE OF PRIORITY First formulated in 1842 Correct formal scientific name for an animal taxon is the oldest available valid name. 1815 George Ord named a species of Pronghorn – Antilocapra americana 1855 John Edward Gray published same species – Antilocapra anteflexa Here, based on Principle of priority the name Antilocapra americana takes priority & Antilocapra anteflexa becomes a junior synonym. PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
PRINCIPLE OF CO-ORDINATION Publishing a new zoological name automatically & simultaneously establishes all corresponding names in the relevant other ranks with the same type. E.g. 1 – Publishing a species name (binomen) – Homo sapiens also establishes the sub-species name (trinomen) – Homo sapiens sapiens E.g. 2 – Publishing a family name – Giraffidae also establishes the super-family name – Giraffoidea & the sub-family name - Giraffinae PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
PRINCIPLE OF THE FIRST REVISER Supplements the Principle of Priority Deals with situations that cannot be resolved by priority Two or more different names for same taxon – In 1758 Linnaeus established Strix scandiaca & Strix noctua as two different species of Aves. Both taxa later turned out a same species, the Snowy owl. In 1931 Lonnberg acted as first reviser & selected Strix scandiaca to have precedence. PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
PRINCIPLE OF HOMONYMY The name of each taxon must be unique . A name that is a homonym of another name must not be used as a valid name. E.g. – In 1773 Drury established Cerambyx maculatus (Coleoptera) for a species from Jamaica. In 1775 Fueblin established Cerambyx maculatus for a different species from Switzerland . Principle of Priority apply here and Drury’s name gets precedence & Fueblin’s name becomes homonym. PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
PRINCIPLE OF TYPIFICATION Any family group name must have a type genus. Any genus group name must have a type species. Any species group name can (not must) have one or more type specimens usually deposited in a museum collection. PRINCIPLES OF ICZN
UNINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE From subgenera & above Utilize a single word Plural nouns for names above genus & singular nouns for genus & subgenus Written with initial capital letter. Zoological code stipulates standard endings for the names of Superfamily (-oidea) – hominoidea Family (- idae ) – hominidae Subfamily (- inae ) – hominae Tribe (- ini ) Rarely Subtribe (- ina ) UNINOMIAL & TRINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE
TRINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE Used when species further subdivided Extends the standard system of binomial nomenclature by adding a third epithet E.g. – Columbia livia domestica (domestic pigeon) , Homo sapiens sapiens In botany, species further divided into any of subspecies, variety, sub variety/form whereas in zoology usually subdivided into subspecies level only. Trinomial name usually includes a qualifier. E.g. – Astrophytum myriostigma subvar.glabrum (where ‘ subvar ’ is the qualifier) UNINOMIAL & TRINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE