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Cultivated plant taxonomy

Cultivated plant taxonomy is the study of the theory and practice of the science that identifies, describes, classifies, and names cultigens—those plants whose origin or selection is primarily due to intentional human activity. Cultivated plant taxonomists do, however, work with all kinds of plants in cultivation.

Some of the traditional tools of cultivated plant taxonomy including: microscope, camera, flowers and book to assist identification.

Cultivated plant taxonomy is one part of the study of horticultural botany which is mostly carried out in botanical gardens, large nurseries, universities, or government departments. Areas of special interest for the cultivated plant taxonomist include: searching for and recording new plants suitable for cultivation (plant hunting); communicating with and advising the general public on matters concerning the classification and nomenclature of cultivated plants and carrying out original research on these topics; describing the cultivated plants of particular regions (horticultural floras); maintaining databases, herbaria and other information about cultivated plants.

Much of the work of the cultivated plant taxonomist is concerned with the naming of plants as prescribed by two plant nomenclatural Codes. The provisions of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (Botanical Code) serve primarily scientific ends and the objectives of the scientific community, while those of the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants (Cultivated Plant Code) are designed to serve both scientific and utilitarian ends by making provision for the names of plants used in commerce—the cultigens that have arisen in agriculture, forestry and horticulture. These names, sometimes called variety names, are not in Latin but are added onto the scientific Latin names, and they assist communication among the community of foresters, farmers and horticulturists.

The history of cultivated plant taxonomy can be traced from the first plant selections that occurred during the agrarian Neolithic Revolution to the first recorded naming of human plant selections by the Romans. The naming and classification of cultigens followed a similar path to that of all plants until the establishment of the first Cultivated Plant Code in 1953 which formally established the cultigen classification category of cultivar. Since that time the classification and naming of cultigens has followed its own path.

Distinctive characteristics edit

Cultivated plant taxonomy has been distinguished from the taxonomy of other plants in at least five ways.

  • Firstly, there is a distinction made according to where the plants are growing — that is, whether they are wild or cultivated. This is alluded to by the Cultivated Plant Code which specifies in its title that it is dealing with cultivated plants.
  • Secondly, a distinction is made according to how the plants originated. This is indicated in Principle 2 of the Cultivated Plant Code which defines the scope of the Code as "... plants whose origin or selection is primarily due to the intentional actions of mankind"[1] — plants that have evolved under natural selection with human assistance.
  • Thirdly, cultivated plant taxonomy is concerned with plant variation that requires the use of special classification categories that do not conform with the hierarchy of ranks implicit in the Botanical Code, these categories being the cultivar, Group and grex (which are only loosely equivalent to ranks in the Botanical Code).[2] This feature is also referred to in the Preamble to the Cultivated Plant Code which states that "The purpose of giving a name to a taxon is not to indicate its characters or history, but to supply a means of referring to it and to indicate to which category it is assigned."[3]
  • Fourthly, cultivated plant taxonomy serves a particular community of people: the Botanical Code focuses on the needs of plant taxonomists as they attempt to maintain order and stability for the scientific names of all plants, while the Cultivated Plant Code caters for the needs of people requiring names for plants used in the commercial world of agriculture, forestry and horticulture.[4]
  • Finally, the difference between cultivated plant taxonomy and the taxonomy of other plants has been attributed to the purpose for which the taxonomy has been devised, it being plant-centred in the Botanical Code and human-centred in the Cultivated Plant Code.[5]

Scientific and anthropocentric classification edit

The key activities of cultivated plant taxonomy relate to classification (taxonomy) and naming (nomenclature). The rules associated with naming plants are separate from the methods, principles or purposes of classification, except that the units of classification, the taxa, are placed in a nested hierarchy of ranks – like species within genera, and genera within families.[6] There are three classification categories used in the Cultivated Plant Code, the cultivar and the Group and the grex, but they are only loosely equivalent to ranks in the Botanical Code.[7]

From the time of the ancient world, at least, plants have been classified in two ways. On the one hand there is the detached academic, philosophical or scientific interest in plants themselves: this groups plants by their relationship to one another according to their similarities and differences in structure and function. Then there is the practical, utilitarian or anthropocentric interest which groups plants according to their human use.[8] Cultivated plant taxonomy is concerned with the special classification categories needed for the plants of agriculture, horticulture and forestry as regulated by the Cultivated Plant Code. This Code serves not only the scientific interests of formal nomenclature, it also caters for the special utilitarian needs of people dealing with the plants of commerce.[4] Those cultigens given names governed by the Cultivated Plant Code fulfill three criteria: they have special features considered of sufficient importance to warrant a name; the special features are the result of deliberate human breeding or selection and are not found in wild populations (except in rare cases where the special features represent desirable part of natural variation found in wild populations that is not covered by a scientific name); it is possible to perpetuate the desirable features by propagation in cultivation.[9]

The terms cultigen and cultivar may be confused with each other. Cultigen is a general-purpose term for plants that have been deliberately altered or specially selected by humans, while cultivar is a formal classification category. Cultigens include not only plants with cultivar names but also those with names in the classification categories of grex and Group. The Cultivated Plant Code points out that cultigens are: deliberately selected plants that may have arisen by intentional or accidental hybridization in cultivation, by selection from existing cultivated stocks, or from variants within wild populations that are maintained as recognizable entities solely by continued propagation.[10] Included within the group of plants known as cultigens are genetically modified plants, plants with binomial Latin names that are the result of ancient human selection, and any plants that have been altered by humans but which have not been given formal names.[11] In practice most cultigens are cultivars.[12]

The following account of the historical development of cultivated plant taxonomy traces the way cultigens have arisen and been incorporated into botanical science; it also demonstrates how two approaches to plant nomenclature and classification have led to the present-day International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants and International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants.

Historical development edit

The history of cultigen nomenclature has been discussed by William T. Stearn[13][14][15] and Brandenberg, Hetterscheid and Berg.[16][17] It has also been examined from a botanical perspective[18] and from the origin of the Cultivated Plant Code in 1953 until 2004.[19]

The early development of cultigen taxonomy follows that of plant taxonomy in general as the early listing and documentation of plants made little distinction between those that were anthropogenic and those that were natural wild kinds. Formal botanical nomenclature and classification evolved from the simple binomial system of folk taxonomy and it was not until the mid-19th century that the nomenclatural path of cultigens began to diverge from mainstream plant taxonomy.[20]

10,000 to 400 BCE – plant domestication edit

 
Sumerian harvester's sickle made from baked clay and dated to about 3000 BCE.

William T. Stearn (1911–2001), taxonomic botanist, classical scholar and author of the book Botanical Latin has commented that "cultivated plants [cultigens] are mankind's most vital and precious heritage from remote antiquity".[21] Cultigens of our most common economic plants probably date back to the first settled communities of the Neolithic Revolution 10,000 to 12,000 years ago although their exact time and place of true origin will probably remain a mystery.[22] In the Western world among the first cultigens would have been selections of the cereals wheat and barley that arose in the early settlements of the Fertile Crescent (the fertile river valleys of the Nile, Tigris and Euphrates) in the Western Mediterranean. Food plant selections would also have been made in the ten or so other centres of settlement that occurred around the world at this time.[23] Confining crops to local areas gave rise to landraces (selections that are highly adapted to local conditions) although these are now largely replaced by modern cultivars. Cuttings are an extremely effective way of perpetuating desirable characters, especially of woody plants like grapes, figs and olives so it is not surprising that these are among the first known plant selections perpetuated in cultivation in the West.[24] Migrating people would take their plant seeds and cuttings with them; there is evidence of early Fertile Crescent cereal cultigens being transferred from Western Asia to surrounding lands.[25]

400 BCE to 1400 – the ancient world: Greco-Roman influence to the Middle Ages edit

 
Aristotle (384–322 BCE)

As early as the 5th century BCE the Greek philosopher Hippo expressed the opinion that cultigens (as we call them now) were produced from wild plants as the result of the care bestowed on them by man, a revolutionary view at a time when they were regarded as the special creation and gift of the gods.[26] In devising ways of classifying organisms the philosopher Aristotle (384–322 BCE) established the important idea of a fundamentum divisionis — the principle that groups can be progressively subdivided. This has been assumed in biological classification ever since and is congruent with the relatively recent idea of evolution as descent with modification. All biological classification follows this principle of groups within groups, known as a nested hierarchy, but this form of classification does not necessarily presuppose evolution.[27]

 
Theophrastus (371–286 BCE)

The earliest scientific (rather than utilitarian) approach to plants is attributed to Aristotle's student Theophrastus (371–286 BCE), known as the "father of botany".[28] In his Enquiry into Plants Theophrastus described 480 kinds of plant, dividing the plant kingdom into trees, shrubs, undershrubs and herbs with further subdivision into wild and cultivated, flowering and non-flowering, deciduous or evergreen.[29]

The utilitarian approach, classifying plants according to their medicinal properties, is exemplified by the work of Roman nobleman, scientist and historian, Pliny the Elder (29–79 CE) author of Natural History.[30] "Cultivars" listed here are named after people, places or special plant characteristics. Most notable is the work of Dioscorides (ca.40–ca.90 CE) a Greek doctor who worked with the Roman army. His five-volume Materia Medica[31] was a forerunner of the herbal which led to the modern pharmacopoeia. This work was endlessly plagiarised by later herbals including those printed between about 1470 and 1670 CE: it listed 600 to 1000 different kinds of plants including the cultigens Gallica, Centifolia, the rose of uncertain origin known as Alba and other rose cultivars grown by the Romans.

 
Pliny the Elder (29–79 CE)

The first record of a named cultigen occurs in De Agri Cultura.[24][32] written about 160 BCE by Roman statesman Cato the Elder (234–149 BCE) in a list that includes 120 kinds (cultivars) of figs, grapes, apples and olives.[24] The names are presented in a way that implies that they would have been familiar to fellow Romans. The "cultivar" names were mostly of one word and denoted the provenance of the cultivar (the geographical origin of the place where the plant selections were made).[33] Writers up to the 15th century added little to this early work. In the Middle Ages the book of hours, early herbals, illuminated manuscripts and economic records indicate that plants grown by the Romans found their way into monastery gardens. For example, in 827 CE the following herbs were mentioned in the poem Hortulus by Walafrid Strabo as growing in the monastery garden of St Gallen in Switzerland: sage, rue, southernwood, wormwood, horehound, fennel, German iris, lovage, chervil, Madonna lily, opium poppy, clary, mint, betony, agrimony, catmint, radish, gallica rose, bottle gourd and melon.[34] It seems likely that aromatic and culinary herbs were quite widespread and similar lists of plants occur in records of plants grown in Villa gardens at the time of Charlemagne (742–814 CE).[33]

1400 to 1700 – Renaissance, imperial expansion, herbals edit

 
Caspar Bauhin (1550–1624)

The revival of learning during the Renaissance reinvigorated the study of plants and their classification. From about 1400 CE European expansion established Latin as the common language of scholars and it was adopted for biological nomenclature. Then, from about 1500 CE, the publication of herbals (books often illustrated with woodcuts describing the appearance, medicinal properties, and other characteristics of plants used in herbal medicine) extended the formal documentation of plants and by the late 16th century the number of different plant kinds described in Europe had risen to about 4,000. In 1623 Gaspard Bauhin published his Pinax theatre botanici[35] an attempt at a comprehensive compilation of all plants known at that time: it included about 6000 kinds.[36] The combined works of a German physician and botanist Valerius Cordus (1515–1544 CE) which were published in 1562 included many named "cultivars" including 30 apples and 49 pears, presumably local German selections.[33] English herbalist John Parkinson's Paradisi in Sole ... (1629) lists 57 apple "cultivars", 62 pears, 61 plums, 35 cherries and 22 peaches.[37]

With increasing trade in economic and medicinal plants the need for a more comprehensive classification system increased. Up to about 1650 CE plants had been grouped either alphabetically or according to utilitarian folk taxonomy – by their medicinal uses or whether they were trees, shrubs or herbs. Between 1650 and 1700 CE there was a move from the utilitarian back to a scientific natural classification based on the characters of the plants themselves.[38]

1700 to 1750 – dawn of scientific classification edit

In 1700 French botanist J.P. de Tournefort although still using the broad groupings of "trees" and "herbs" for flowering plants, began to use flower characteristics as distinguishing features and, most importantly, provided a clear definition of the genus as a basic unit of classification.[39] In Institutiones Rei Herbariae he listed about 10,000 different plants, which he called species, organised into 698 genera with illustrations.[40] The establishment of this precursor of scientific classification vastly improved the organisation of plant variation into approximately equivalent groups or ranks and many of his genera were later taken up by Carl Linnaeus.[41] There was still at this time no common agreement on the way to present plant names so they ranged in length from one word to lengthy descriptive sentences. As the number of recorded plants increased this naming system became more unwieldy.

In England the tradition of documenting garden plants was established long before Linnaeus' Species Plantarum starting with the herbals, but the most prominent early chronicler was Philip Miller (1691–1771) who was a master gardener in charge of the Chelsea Physic Garden in London from 1722 to 1770. New plants were coming into Western Europe from southern Europe and the overseas colonies of the Dutch, British and French. These new plants came largely to the botanic gardens of Amsterdam, Leiden, Chelsea and Paris and they needed recording. In 1724 Miller produced a two-volume compendium of garden plants called The Gardeners and Florists Dictionary or a complete System of Horticulture. The first edition was in 1724, subsequently revised and enlarged until the last and 8th edition in 1768 by which time he had adopted Linnaean binomials.[42] For a while this publication was taken as the starting point for "horticultural" nomenclature equivalent to Linnaeus' Species Plantarum which is now taken as the starting point for botanical nomenclature in general. Miller's Dictionary was the first of many English horticultural compendia whose history has been traced by William Stearn.[43]

1750 to 1800 – Linnaeus and binomial nomenclature edit

 
Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778) who established the binomial system of plant nomenclature.

In the early 18th century colonial expansion and exploration created a demand for the description of thousands of new organisms. This highlighted difficulties in communication about plants, the replication of their descriptions, and the importance of an agreed way of presenting, publishing and applying their names.

It was the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus who finally put order into this situation as he attempted to name all the known organisms of his day.[44] In 1735 his Systema Naturae,[45] which included animals (the tenth edition became the starting point for zoological nomenclature) was followed by Critica Botanica in 1737, and Philosophia Botanica in 1751. But it was his most comprehensive work on plants, the 1753 publication Species Plantarum[46] that formalised the name of a genus with a single epithet to form the name of a species as two words, the binomial thus making secure the biological system of binomial nomenclature. In these works Linnaeus used a third name as a variety within a species. These varieties included both wild and horticultural variants. The horticultural varieties were still written in Latin and some have persisted to this day.

Linnaeus had very definite and uncomplimentary views about cultigens, regarding them as inferior plants for the amusement of those people he disparagingly called anthophiles (flower-lovers); these were plants not deserving the attention of serious botanists. His views revealed both his prejudice, his stance on special creation, and his recognition of the difficulties entailed in cultivated plant taxonomy:

"anthophiles … practice a floral science all their own, grasped only by their devotees; no botanist in his senses will enlist in their camp."[47]

"All the species recognized by Botanists came forth from the Almighty Creator's hand, and the number now and always will be exactly the same, while every day new and different florist's species arise from the true species recognized by botanists, and when they have arisen they eventually revert to their original forms. Accordingly to the former have been assigned by Nature fixed limits, beyond which they cannot go: while the latter display without end the infinite sport of Nature."[48]

"... botany has been overborne by the system of varieties for long enough … few, if any, agree as to what constitutes a species, or what a variety; … I wish the system of varieties were entirely excluded from Botany and turned over entirely to the Anthophiles, since it causes nothing but ambiguities, errors, dead weight and vanity …"[49]

1800 to 1900 – global plant trade edit

 
Linnaeus's Species Plantarum of 1753, his catalogue of all the world's plants known to European science.

The natural distribution of plants across the world has determined when and where cultigens have been produced. The botanical and horticultural collection of economically important plants, including ornamentals, was based in Europe. Although economic herbs and spices had a long history in trade, and there are good records of cultivar distribution by the Romans, European botanical and horticultural exploration rapidly increased in the 19th century with the colonial expansion taking place at the time. New plants were brought back to Europe while, at the same time, valuable economic plants, including those from the tropics, were distributed among the colonies. This plant trade has provided the common global heritage of economic and ornamental cultigens that we use today and which formed the stock for modern plant selection, breeding, and genetic engineering. The plant exchange that occurred as a result of European trade can be divided into several phases:[50]

  • to 1560 mostly within Europe
  • 1560–1620 Near East (esp. bulbous plants from Turkey – "tulipomania")
  • 1620–1686 Canada and Virginia herbaceous plants
  • 1687–1772 Cape of South Africa
  • 1687–1772 North American trees and shrubs
  • 1772–1820 Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand
  • 1820–1900 Tropical glasshouse plants; hardy Japanese plants
  • 1900–1930 West China
  • 1930 Intensive breeding and selection programs

1900 to 1950 – the Botanical Code and cultigen nomenclature edit

As the community of people dealing with the cultigens of commerce grew so, once again, the divergence between taxonomy serving scientific purposes and utilitarian taxonomy meeting human needs re-emerged. In 1865 German botanist Karl Koch, who became General Secretary of the Berlin Horticultural Society, expressed resentment at the continued use of Latin for cultigen names. Many proposals to deal with this were made, perhaps the most prominent being the Lois de la nomenclature botanique submitted in 1867 to the fourth Horticultural and Botanical Congress by Swiss botanist Alphonse de Candolle who, in Article 40 stated:

"Seedlings, half-breeds (métis) of unknown origin or sports should receive from horticulturists fancy names (noms de fantaisie) in common language, as distinct as possible from the Latin names of species or varieties."[51]

 
Outstanding American cultivated plant taxonomist Liberty Hyde Bailey (1858–1954).

This Article, making provision for the cultigens of horticultural nomenclature was to remain in the Botanical Code (with a minor amendment in 1935 suggesting the use of the letter 'c' before the horticultural name and antedating formal recognition of the cultivar) through 1906, 1912 and 1935 until the separation, in 1953, of the Horticultural Code, precursor to the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants (Cultivated Plant Code). In 1900 there was the first International Botanical Congress and in 1905 at the second Congress in Vienna an agreed set of nomenclatural rules was established, the Vienna Rules, which became known from then on as the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (now the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants). After World War II the responsibility for the Botanical Code was taken up by the International Association for Plant Taxonomy and meetings to discuss revisions are held at six-yearly intervals, the latest being in 2005.[52]

In horticulture at this time there existed all the problems that had confronted botanists in the 19th century – a plethora of names of various length, written and published in many languages with much duplication. The period between 1867 and 1953 was an uneasy time in which American horticulturists and other groups in Europe, such as the specialist orchid community, made attempts to put order into this chaos within their particular group of interest and devising their own rules for naming the plants of commerce. Friedrich Alefeld (1820–1872), who used Latin variety names, in a monographic study of beans, lentils and other legumes distinguished three infraspecific taxonomic categories: Unterart (subspecies), Varietäten Gruppe and Kultur-Varietät, all with Latin names.[53] In doing this he was probably laying the ground for the later establishment of the cultigen classification categories cultivar and Group. In conjunction with the Brussels International Botanical Congress of 1910 there was an International Horticultural Congress having a horticultural nomenclature component.

As a result of general dissatisfaction and a submission from the Royal Horticultural Society the Règles de Nomenclature Horticole was established.[54] The use of simple descriptive Latin names (e.g. compactus, nanus, prostratus) for horticultural variants was accepted and so too were names in the local language – which were not to be translated and should preferably consist of one word and a maximum of three. This first Horticultural Code consisted of 16 Articles. With the intercession of a World War I it was not until the 9th Horticultural Congress in London in 1930 that the rules of a Horticulture Nomenclature Committee were agreed and added as an appendix to the 1935 Botanical Code. The rules established in 1935 were accepted but needed to be extended to include the cultigens of agriculture and forestry, but it was only a result of discussions at the 1950 International Botanical Congress in Stockholm and the 18th International Horticultural Congress in London in 1952 the first International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants was published in 1953. The American horticultural botanist Liberty Hyde Bailey was responsible for coining the word cultigen in 1918[55][56] and cultivar in 1923,[57] the word cultivar only coming into general circulation with the new Code of 1953. The use of these two terms belies the multitude of classification terms and categories that had been suggested as designations for cultigens.[58][59]

1953 – the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants edit

The first Cultivated Plant Code (Wageningen), which was published in 1953, has been followed by eight subsequent editions – in 1958 (Utrecht), 1961 (update of 1958), 1969 (Edinburgh), 1980 (Seattle), 1995 (Edinburgh), 2004 (Toronto) and 2009 (Wageningen).[60]

Following the structure of the Botanical Code the Cultivated Plant Code is set out in the form of an initial set of Principles followed by Rules and Recommendations that are subdivided into Articles. Amendments to the Cultivated Plant Code are prompted by international symposia for cultivated plant taxonomy which allow for rulings made by the International Commission on the Nomenclature of Cultivated Plants. Each new Cultivated Plant Code includes a summary of the changes made to the previous version and these have also been summarised for the period 1953 to 1995.[19]

International Association for Cultivated Plant Taxonomy edit

 
Wisley is one of the Royal Horticultural Society's flagship gardens and a focus for cultivated plant taxonomy.

Recent concerns have focused on international communication on cultivated plant taxonomy, organisation of international symposia, and general communication on topics of interest. In 1988 a Horticultural Taxonomy Group (Hortax)[nb 1] was formed in the UK and a parallel organisation, the Nomenclature and Registration Working Group of the Vaste Keurings Commissie in the Netherlands. One development promoting discussion was the newsletter Hortax News which was superseded in February 2006 by the first issue of Hanburyana, a journal produced by the Royal Horticultural Society in London and dedicated to horticultural taxonomy. This filled a gap left when the American journal Baileya ceased publication in the early 1990s. Another development was the launch, in 2007, at the Sixth Symposium on the Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants at Wageningen of the International Association for Cultivated Plant Taxonomy. Hortax also publishes Plant Names: A Guide for Horticulturists, Nurserymen, Gardeners and Students.[61]

Presenting cultigen names edit

Most cultigens have names consisting of a Latin name that is governed by the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants e.g. Malus domestica, to which is added a cultivar epithet, enclosed in single quotes e.g. Malus domestica 'Granny Smith'. The formation and use of the three classification categories (ranks) used for cultigens, the cultivar, Group and grex, is regulated by the ICNCP. Examples of acceptable ways to present cultigen names are given below:

Prunus serrata Sato-zakura Group
Prunus serrata (Sato-zakura Group) 'Ojochin'
Prunus 'Ojochin'
Flowering cherry 'Ojochin'

Contemporary issues edit

 
Chelsea Physic Garden, summer 2006

Current challenges for cultivated plant taxonomists include: the use of large plant name databases; ways of dealing with the use of non-scientific names in commerce (known as trade designations), especially for plant labels in nurseries; intellectual property and plants; adapting modern technology, in particular molecular techniques, to the creation and identification of cultivars; maintaining germplasm collections of cultivars, including herbaria; the recording and registration of cultivars.[62]

The ways in which the plant variation resulting from human activity is named and classified remains contentious. The replacement of the expression "cultivated plant" with the word "cultigen" is not universally accepted.[63] The debate continues concerning the notions of ranks and taxa as applied to cultigens. Is it appropriate to call the highly modified transgenic products of human artificial selection "taxa" in the same way we do for the products of natural selection in the wild? To overcome this difficulty the term culton (pl. culta) has been suggested to replace the word taxon when speaking about cultigens.[64][65][66]

Then, most "wild" plants fit neatly into the nested hierarchy of ranks used in Linnaean classification (species into genera, genera into families etc.) which aligns with Darwinian descent with modification. Choosing classification categories for cultigens is not clear-cut. Included among cultigens are: simple selections taken from plants in the wild or in cultivation; artificial hybrids produced both by accident and intention; plants produced by genetic engineering; clonal material reproduced by cuttings, grafting, budding, layering etc.; graft-chimaeras; selections from the wild; ancient selections of crops that date back thousands of years; selections of aberrant growth such as witches brooms; the results of deliberate repeatable single crosses between two pure lines to produce plants of a particular general appearance that is desirable for horticulture, but which are not genetically identical. The question remains as to whether the classification categories of cultivar, Group and grex are the most appropriate and efficient way to deal with this broad range of plant variation.[67]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ A committee of cultivated plant taxonomists based in the British Isles. 2009-12-07 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved: 2010-08-05

References edit

  1. ^ Cultivated Plant Code Brickell 2009, p. 3
  2. ^ McNeill 2004, p. 32
  3. ^ Cultivated Plant Code Brickell 2009, p. 1
  4. ^ a b Spencer & Cross 2008, p. 165
  5. ^ McNeill 2008, p. 25
  6. ^ McNeill 2004, p. 31
  7. ^ Cultivated Plant Code, Articles 2 & 3 Brickell 2009
  8. ^ Arber 1986, p. 1
  9. ^ Spencer, Cross & Lumley 2007, p. 50
  10. ^ Cultivated Plant Code Art. 2.3 Brickell 2009, p. 1
  11. ^ Spencer, Cross & Lumley 2007, p. 47
  12. ^ Spencer, Cross & Lumley 2007, p. 53
  13. ^ Stearn 1965a
  14. ^ Stearn 1965b, pp. 279–291, 322–341
  15. ^ Stearn 1986, pp. 19–28
  16. ^ Brandenburg 1986, pp. 109–115
  17. ^ Hetterscheid, van den Berg & Brandenburg 1996, pp. 123–134
  18. ^ McNeill 2004, pp. 25–36
  19. ^ a b Trehane 2004, pp. 17–27
  20. ^ Spencer, Cross & Lumley 2007, p. 48
  21. ^ Stearn 1965b, p. 282
  22. ^ Morton 1981, p. 2
  23. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 2–3
  24. ^ a b c Stearn 1986, p. 19
  25. ^ Stearn 1965b, p. 325
  26. ^ Morton 1981, p. 25
  27. ^ Stuessy 2009, p. 21
  28. ^ Stace 1984, p. 22
  29. ^ Theophrastus 1916
  30. ^ "Pliny's Naturalis historiae Retrieved: 2010-08-05". from the original on 2008-09-15. Retrieved 2021-02-20.
  31. ^ "Dioscorides' Materia Medica Retrieved: 2010-08-05". from the original on 2008-06-14. Retrieved 2008-06-11.
  32. ^ Marcus Cato's De Agri Cultura Retrieved: 2010-08-05
  33. ^ a b c Stearn 1986, p. 20
  34. ^ Stearn 1965b, p. 324
  35. ^ "Caspar Bauhin's Pinax theatre botanici Retrieved: 2010-08-05". from the original on 2016-10-17. Retrieved 2008-06-11.
  36. ^ Morton 1981, p. 145
  37. ^ John Parkinson's Paradisi in Sole … Retrieved: 2011-05-04
  38. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 165–219
  39. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 202
  40. ^ Morton 1981, p. 228
  41. ^ Morton 1981, pp. 197–204
  42. ^ Miller 1754
  43. ^ Stearn 1992, pp. ix–x
  44. ^ Hunt Botanic Garden account of Linnaeus' work. Retrieved: 2010-08-05 Archived 2012-07-11 at archive.today
  45. ^ Linnaeus' Systema Naturae 13th edition (Volume I,532 pages) Retrieved: 2010-08-05
  46. ^ "Linnaeus' Species Plantarum Retrieved: 2010-08-05". from the original on 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2008-06-13.
  47. ^ Aphorism 310 , Philosophia Botanica
  48. ^ Hort 1938, p. 198
  49. ^ Heller 1968, Eng.transl. Preface to Hortus Cliffortianus
  50. ^ Stearn 1965b, pp. 325–326
  51. ^ de Candolle 1867, Article 40
  52. ^ McNeill 2006[full citation needed]
  53. ^ Stearn 1986, p. 22
  54. ^ Royal Horticultural Society 1911
  55. ^ Bailey 1918
  56. ^ Spencer & Cross 2007
  57. ^ Bailey 1923
  58. ^ Jirásek 1961
  59. ^ Jeffrey 1968
  60. ^ Brickell 2009
  61. ^ Plant Names: A Guide for Horticulturists, Nurserymen, Gardeners and Students. Hortax 2007 2013-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  62. ^ Andrews & Leslie 1999
  63. ^ Cultivated Plant Code, see footnote Brickell 2009, p. 1
  64. ^ Hetterscheid & Brandenburg 1994
  65. ^ Hetterscheid & Brandenburg 1995
  66. ^ McNeill 1998, pp. 15–22
  67. ^ McNeill 2008

Bibliography edit

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  • McNeill, John (1998). "Culton: A Useful Term, Questionably Argued". Hortax News. 1: 15–22.
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External links edit

  • 2009 ICNCP Code online

cultivated, plant, taxonomy, study, theory, practice, science, that, identifies, describes, classifies, names, cultigens, those, plants, whose, origin, selection, primarily, intentional, human, activity, cultivated, plant, taxonomists, however, work, with, kin. Cultivated plant taxonomy is the study of the theory and practice of the science that identifies describes classifies and names cultigens those plants whose origin or selection is primarily due to intentional human activity Cultivated plant taxonomists do however work with all kinds of plants in cultivation Some of the traditional tools of cultivated plant taxonomy including microscope camera flowers and book to assist identification Cultivated plant taxonomy is one part of the study of horticultural botany which is mostly carried out in botanical gardens large nurseries universities or government departments Areas of special interest for the cultivated plant taxonomist include searching for and recording new plants suitable for cultivation plant hunting communicating with and advising the general public on matters concerning the classification and nomenclature of cultivated plants and carrying out original research on these topics describing the cultivated plants of particular regions horticultural floras maintaining databases herbaria and other information about cultivated plants Much of the work of the cultivated plant taxonomist is concerned with the naming of plants as prescribed by two plant nomenclatural Codes The provisions of the International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants Botanical Code serve primarily scientific ends and the objectives of the scientific community while those of the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants Cultivated Plant Code are designed to serve both scientific and utilitarian ends by making provision for the names of plants used in commerce the cultigens that have arisen in agriculture forestry and horticulture These names sometimes called variety names are not in Latin but are added onto the scientific Latin names and they assist communication among the community of foresters farmers and horticulturists The history of cultivated plant taxonomy can be traced from the first plant selections that occurred during the agrarian Neolithic Revolution to the first recorded naming of human plant selections by the Romans The naming and classification of cultigens followed a similar path to that of all plants until the establishment of the first Cultivated Plant Code in 1953 which formally established the cultigen classification category of cultivar Since that time the classification and naming of cultigens has followed its own path Contents 1 Distinctive characteristics 2 Scientific and anthropocentric classification 3 Historical development 3 1 10 000 to 400 BCE plant domestication 3 2 400 BCE to 1400 the ancient world Greco Roman influence to the Middle Ages 3 3 1400 to 1700 Renaissance imperial expansion herbals 3 4 1700 to 1750 dawn of scientific classification 3 5 1750 to 1800 Linnaeus and binomial nomenclature 3 6 1800 to 1900 global plant trade 3 7 1900 to 1950 the Botanical Code and cultigen nomenclature 3 8 1953 the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants 4 International Association for Cultivated Plant Taxonomy 5 Presenting cultigen names 6 Contemporary issues 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksDistinctive characteristics editFurther information Cultivar Group and Grex Cultivated plant taxonomy has been distinguished from the taxonomy of other plants in at least five ways Firstly there is a distinction made according to where the plants are growing that is whether they are wild or cultivated This is alluded to by the Cultivated Plant Code which specifies in its title that it is dealing with cultivated plants Secondly a distinction is made according to how the plants originated This is indicated in Principle 2 of the Cultivated Plant Code which defines the scope of the Code as plants whose origin or selection is primarily due to the intentional actions of mankind 1 plants that have evolved under natural selection with human assistance Thirdly cultivated plant taxonomy is concerned with plant variation that requires the use of special classification categories that do not conform with the hierarchy of ranks implicit in the Botanical Code these categories being the cultivar Group and grex which are only loosely equivalent to ranks in the Botanical Code 2 This feature is also referred to in the Preamble to the Cultivated Plant Code which states that The purpose of giving a name to a taxon is not to indicate its characters or history but to supply a means of referring to it and to indicate to which category it is assigned 3 Fourthly cultivated plant taxonomy serves a particular community of people the Botanical Code focuses on the needs of plant taxonomists as they attempt to maintain order and stability for the scientific names of all plants while the Cultivated Plant Code caters for the needs of people requiring names for plants used in the commercial world of agriculture forestry and horticulture 4 Finally the difference between cultivated plant taxonomy and the taxonomy of other plants has been attributed to the purpose for which the taxonomy has been devised it being plant centred in the Botanical Code and human centred in the Cultivated Plant Code 5 Scientific and anthropocentric classification editMain article Plant taxonomy The key activities of cultivated plant taxonomy relate to classification taxonomy and naming nomenclature The rules associated with naming plants are separate from the methods principles or purposes of classification except that the units of classification the taxa are placed in a nested hierarchy of ranks like species within genera and genera within families 6 There are three classification categories used in the Cultivated Plant Code the cultivar and the Group and the grex but they are only loosely equivalent to ranks in the Botanical Code 7 From the time of the ancient world at least plants have been classified in two ways On the one hand there is the detached academic philosophical or scientific interest in plants themselves this groups plants by their relationship to one another according to their similarities and differences in structure and function Then there is the practical utilitarian or anthropocentric interest which groups plants according to their human use 8 Cultivated plant taxonomy is concerned with the special classification categories needed for the plants of agriculture horticulture and forestry as regulated by the Cultivated Plant Code This Code serves not only the scientific interests of formal nomenclature it also caters for the special utilitarian needs of people dealing with the plants of commerce 4 Those cultigens given names governed by the Cultivated Plant Code fulfill three criteria they have special features considered of sufficient importance to warrant a name the special features are the result of deliberate human breeding or selection and are not found in wild populations except in rare cases where the special features represent desirable part of natural variation found in wild populations that is not covered by a scientific name it is possible to perpetuate the desirable features by propagation in cultivation 9 The terms cultigen and cultivar may be confused with each other Cultigen is a general purpose term for plants that have been deliberately altered or specially selected by humans while cultivar is a formal classification category Cultigens include not only plants with cultivar names but also those with names in the classification categories of grex and Group The Cultivated Plant Code points out that cultigens are deliberately selected plants that may have arisen by intentional or accidental hybridization in cultivation by selection from existing cultivated stocks or from variants within wild populations that are maintained as recognizable entities solely by continued propagation 10 Included within the group of plants known as cultigens are genetically modified plants plants with binomial Latin names that are the result of ancient human selection and any plants that have been altered by humans but which have not been given formal names 11 In practice most cultigens are cultivars 12 The following account of the historical development of cultivated plant taxonomy traces the way cultigens have arisen and been incorporated into botanical science it also demonstrates how two approaches to plant nomenclature and classification have led to the present day International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants and International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants Historical development editMain article History of botany The history of cultigen nomenclature has been discussed by William T Stearn 13 14 15 and Brandenberg Hetterscheid and Berg 16 17 It has also been examined from a botanical perspective 18 and from the origin of the Cultivated Plant Code in 1953 until 2004 19 The early development of cultigen taxonomy follows that of plant taxonomy in general as the early listing and documentation of plants made little distinction between those that were anthropogenic and those that were natural wild kinds Formal botanical nomenclature and classification evolved from the simple binomial system of folk taxonomy and it was not until the mid 19th century that the nomenclatural path of cultigens began to diverge from mainstream plant taxonomy 20 10 000 to 400 BCE plant domestication edit Main article Neolithic Revolution nbsp Sumerian harvester s sickle made from baked clay and dated to about 3000 BCE William T Stearn 1911 2001 taxonomic botanist classical scholar and author of the book Botanical Latin has commented that cultivated plants cultigens are mankind s most vital and precious heritage from remote antiquity 21 Cultigens of our most common economic plants probably date back to the first settled communities of the Neolithic Revolution 10 000 to 12 000 years ago although their exact time and place of true origin will probably remain a mystery 22 In the Western world among the first cultigens would have been selections of the cereals wheat and barley that arose in the early settlements of the Fertile Crescent the fertile river valleys of the Nile Tigris and Euphrates in the Western Mediterranean Food plant selections would also have been made in the ten or so other centres of settlement that occurred around the world at this time 23 Confining crops to local areas gave rise to landraces selections that are highly adapted to local conditions although these are now largely replaced by modern cultivars Cuttings are an extremely effective way of perpetuating desirable characters especially of woody plants like grapes figs and olives so it is not surprising that these are among the first known plant selections perpetuated in cultivation in the West 24 Migrating people would take their plant seeds and cuttings with them there is evidence of early Fertile Crescent cereal cultigens being transferred from Western Asia to surrounding lands 25 400 BCE to 1400 the ancient world Greco Roman influence to the Middle Ages edit Main article History of botany nbsp Aristotle 384 322 BCE As early as the 5th century BCE the Greek philosopher Hippo expressed the opinion that cultigens as we call them now were produced from wild plants as the result of the care bestowed on them by man a revolutionary view at a time when they were regarded as the special creation and gift of the gods 26 In devising ways of classifying organisms the philosopher Aristotle 384 322 BCE established the important idea of a fundamentum divisionis the principle that groups can be progressively subdivided This has been assumed in biological classification ever since and is congruent with the relatively recent idea of evolution as descent with modification All biological classification follows this principle of groups within groups known as a nested hierarchy but this form of classification does not necessarily presuppose evolution 27 nbsp Theophrastus 371 286 BCE The earliest scientific rather than utilitarian approach to plants is attributed to Aristotle s student Theophrastus 371 286 BCE known as the father of botany 28 In his Enquiry into Plants Theophrastus described 480 kinds of plant dividing the plant kingdom into trees shrubs undershrubs and herbs with further subdivision into wild and cultivated flowering and non flowering deciduous or evergreen 29 The utilitarian approach classifying plants according to their medicinal properties is exemplified by the work of Roman nobleman scientist and historian Pliny the Elder 29 79 CE author of Natural History 30 Cultivars listed here are named after people places or special plant characteristics Most notable is the work of Dioscorides ca 40 ca 90 CE a Greek doctor who worked with the Roman army His five volume Materia Medica 31 was a forerunner of the herbal which led to the modern pharmacopoeia This work was endlessly plagiarised by later herbals including those printed between about 1470 and 1670 CE it listed 600 to 1000 different kinds of plants including the cultigens Gallica Centifolia the rose of uncertain origin known as Alba and other rose cultivars grown by the Romans nbsp Pliny the Elder 29 79 CE The first record of a named cultigen occurs in De Agri Cultura 24 32 written about 160 BCE by Roman statesman Cato the Elder 234 149 BCE in a list that includes 120 kinds cultivars of figs grapes apples and olives 24 The names are presented in a way that implies that they would have been familiar to fellow Romans The cultivar names were mostly of one word and denoted the provenance of the cultivar the geographical origin of the place where the plant selections were made 33 Writers up to the 15th century added little to this early work In the Middle Ages the book of hours early herbals illuminated manuscripts and economic records indicate that plants grown by the Romans found their way into monastery gardens For example in 827 CE the following herbs were mentioned in the poem Hortulus by Walafrid Strabo as growing in the monastery garden of St Gallen in Switzerland sage rue southernwood wormwood horehound fennel German iris lovage chervil Madonna lily opium poppy clary mint betony agrimony catmint radish gallica rose bottle gourd and melon 34 It seems likely that aromatic and culinary herbs were quite widespread and similar lists of plants occur in records of plants grown in Villa gardens at the time of Charlemagne 742 814 CE 33 1400 to 1700 Renaissance imperial expansion herbals edit Main article Herbal nbsp Caspar Bauhin 1550 1624 The revival of learning during the Renaissance reinvigorated the study of plants and their classification From about 1400 CE European expansion established Latin as the common language of scholars and it was adopted for biological nomenclature Then from about 1500 CE the publication of herbals books often illustrated with woodcuts describing the appearance medicinal properties and other characteristics of plants used in herbal medicine extended the formal documentation of plants and by the late 16th century the number of different plant kinds described in Europe had risen to about 4 000 In 1623 Gaspard Bauhin published his Pinax theatre botanici 35 an attempt at a comprehensive compilation of all plants known at that time it included about 6000 kinds 36 The combined works of a German physician and botanist Valerius Cordus 1515 1544 CE which were published in 1562 included many named cultivars including 30 apples and 49 pears presumably local German selections 33 English herbalist John Parkinson s Paradisi in Sole 1629 lists 57 apple cultivars 62 pears 61 plums 35 cherries and 22 peaches 37 With increasing trade in economic and medicinal plants the need for a more comprehensive classification system increased Up to about 1650 CE plants had been grouped either alphabetically or according to utilitarian folk taxonomy by their medicinal uses or whether they were trees shrubs or herbs Between 1650 and 1700 CE there was a move from the utilitarian back to a scientific natural classification based on the characters of the plants themselves 38 1700 to 1750 dawn of scientific classification edit Main article History of plant systematics In 1700 French botanist J P de Tournefort although still using the broad groupings of trees and herbs for flowering plants began to use flower characteristics as distinguishing features and most importantly provided a clear definition of the genus as a basic unit of classification 39 In Institutiones Rei Herbariae he listed about 10 000 different plants which he called species organised into 698 genera with illustrations 40 The establishment of this precursor of scientific classification vastly improved the organisation of plant variation into approximately equivalent groups or ranks and many of his genera were later taken up by Carl Linnaeus 41 There was still at this time no common agreement on the way to present plant names so they ranged in length from one word to lengthy descriptive sentences As the number of recorded plants increased this naming system became more unwieldy In England the tradition of documenting garden plants was established long before Linnaeus Species Plantarum starting with the herbals but the most prominent early chronicler was Philip Miller 1691 1771 who was a master gardener in charge of the Chelsea Physic Garden in London from 1722 to 1770 New plants were coming into Western Europe from southern Europe and the overseas colonies of the Dutch British and French These new plants came largely to the botanic gardens of Amsterdam Leiden Chelsea and Paris and they needed recording In 1724 Miller produced a two volume compendium of garden plants called The Gardeners and Florists Dictionary or a complete System of Horticulture The first edition was in 1724 subsequently revised and enlarged until the last and 8th edition in 1768 by which time he had adopted Linnaean binomials 42 For a while this publication was taken as the starting point for horticultural nomenclature equivalent to Linnaeus Species Plantarum which is now taken as the starting point for botanical nomenclature in general Miller s Dictionary was the first of many English horticultural compendia whose history has been traced by William Stearn 43 1750 to 1800 Linnaeus and binomial nomenclature edit Further information Carl Linnaeus and Binomial nomenclature nbsp Carl Linnaeus 1707 1778 who established the binomial system of plant nomenclature In the early 18th century colonial expansion and exploration created a demand for the description of thousands of new organisms This highlighted difficulties in communication about plants the replication of their descriptions and the importance of an agreed way of presenting publishing and applying their names It was the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus who finally put order into this situation as he attempted to name all the known organisms of his day 44 In 1735 his Systema Naturae 45 which included animals the tenth edition became the starting point for zoological nomenclature was followed by Critica Botanica in 1737 and Philosophia Botanica in 1751 But it was his most comprehensive work on plants the 1753 publication Species Plantarum 46 that formalised the name of a genus with a single epithet to form the name of a species as two words the binomial thus making secure the biological system of binomial nomenclature In these works Linnaeus used a third name as a variety within a species These varieties included both wild and horticultural variants The horticultural varieties were still written in Latin and some have persisted to this day Linnaeus had very definite and uncomplimentary views about cultigens regarding them as inferior plants for the amusement of those people he disparagingly called anthophiles flower lovers these were plants not deserving the attention of serious botanists His views revealed both his prejudice his stance on special creation and his recognition of the difficulties entailed in cultivated plant taxonomy anthophiles practice a floral science all their own grasped only by their devotees no botanist in his senses will enlist in their camp 47 All the species recognized by Botanists came forth from the Almighty Creator s hand and the number now and always will be exactly the same while every day new and different florist s species arise from the true species recognized by botanists and when they have arisen they eventually revert to their original forms Accordingly to the former have been assigned by Nature fixed limits beyond which they cannot go while the latter display without end the infinite sport of Nature 48 botany has been overborne by the system of varieties for long enough few if any agree as to what constitutes a species or what a variety I wish the system of varieties were entirely excluded from Botany and turned over entirely to the Anthophiles since it causes nothing but ambiguities errors dead weight and vanity 49 1800 to 1900 global plant trade edit nbsp Linnaeus s Species Plantarum of 1753 his catalogue of all the world s plants known to European science The natural distribution of plants across the world has determined when and where cultigens have been produced The botanical and horticultural collection of economically important plants including ornamentals was based in Europe Although economic herbs and spices had a long history in trade and there are good records of cultivar distribution by the Romans European botanical and horticultural exploration rapidly increased in the 19th century with the colonial expansion taking place at the time New plants were brought back to Europe while at the same time valuable economic plants including those from the tropics were distributed among the colonies This plant trade has provided the common global heritage of economic and ornamental cultigens that we use today and which formed the stock for modern plant selection breeding and genetic engineering The plant exchange that occurred as a result of European trade can be divided into several phases 50 to 1560 mostly within Europe 1560 1620 Near East esp bulbous plants from Turkey tulipomania 1620 1686 Canada and Virginia herbaceous plants 1687 1772 Cape of South Africa 1687 1772 North American trees and shrubs 1772 1820 Australia Tasmania New Zealand 1820 1900 Tropical glasshouse plants hardy Japanese plants 1900 1930 West China 1930 Intensive breeding and selection programs dd dd 1900 to 1950 the Botanical Code and cultigen nomenclature edit Main article CultigenAs the community of people dealing with the cultigens of commerce grew so once again the divergence between taxonomy serving scientific purposes and utilitarian taxonomy meeting human needs re emerged In 1865 German botanist Karl Koch who became General Secretary of the Berlin Horticultural Society expressed resentment at the continued use of Latin for cultigen names Many proposals to deal with this were made perhaps the most prominent being the Lois de la nomenclature botanique submitted in 1867 to the fourth Horticultural and Botanical Congress by Swiss botanist Alphonse de Candolle who in Article 40 stated Seedlings half breeds metis of unknown origin or sports should receive from horticulturists fancy names noms de fantaisie in common language as distinct as possible from the Latin names of species or varieties 51 nbsp Outstanding American cultivated plant taxonomist Liberty Hyde Bailey 1858 1954 This Article making provision for the cultigens of horticultural nomenclature was to remain in the Botanical Code with a minor amendment in 1935 suggesting the use of the letter c before the horticultural name and antedating formal recognition of the cultivar through 1906 1912 and 1935 until the separation in 1953 of the Horticultural Code precursor to the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants Cultivated Plant Code In 1900 there was the first International Botanical Congress and in 1905 at the second Congress in Vienna an agreed set of nomenclatural rules was established the Vienna Rules which became known from then on as the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature now the International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants After World War II the responsibility for the Botanical Code was taken up by the International Association for Plant Taxonomy and meetings to discuss revisions are held at six yearly intervals the latest being in 2005 52 In horticulture at this time there existed all the problems that had confronted botanists in the 19th century a plethora of names of various length written and published in many languages with much duplication The period between 1867 and 1953 was an uneasy time in which American horticulturists and other groups in Europe such as the specialist orchid community made attempts to put order into this chaos within their particular group of interest and devising their own rules for naming the plants of commerce Friedrich Alefeld 1820 1872 who used Latin variety names in a monographic study of beans lentils and other legumes distinguished three infraspecific taxonomic categories Unterart subspecies Varietaten Gruppe and Kultur Varietat all with Latin names 53 In doing this he was probably laying the ground for the later establishment of the cultigen classification categories cultivar and Group In conjunction with the Brussels International Botanical Congress of 1910 there was an International Horticultural Congress having a horticultural nomenclature component As a result of general dissatisfaction and a submission from the Royal Horticultural Society the Regles de Nomenclature Horticole was established 54 The use of simple descriptive Latin names e g compactus nanus prostratus for horticultural variants was accepted and so too were names in the local language which were not to be translated and should preferably consist of one word and a maximum of three This first Horticultural Code consisted of 16 Articles With the intercession of a World War I it was not until the 9th Horticultural Congress in London in 1930 that the rules of a Horticulture Nomenclature Committee were agreed and added as an appendix to the 1935 Botanical Code The rules established in 1935 were accepted but needed to be extended to include the cultigens of agriculture and forestry but it was only a result of discussions at the 1950 International Botanical Congress in Stockholm and the 18th International Horticultural Congress in London in 1952 the first International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants was published in 1953 The American horticultural botanist Liberty Hyde Bailey was responsible for coining the word cultigen in 1918 55 56 and cultivar in 1923 57 the word cultivar only coming into general circulation with the new Code of 1953 The use of these two terms belies the multitude of classification terms and categories that had been suggested as designations for cultigens 58 59 1953 the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants edit Main article International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants The first Cultivated Plant Code Wageningen which was published in 1953 has been followed by eight subsequent editions in 1958 Utrecht 1961 update of 1958 1969 Edinburgh 1980 Seattle 1995 Edinburgh 2004 Toronto and 2009 Wageningen 60 Following the structure of the Botanical Code the Cultivated Plant Code is set out in the form of an initial set of Principles followed by Rules and Recommendations that are subdivided into Articles Amendments to the Cultivated Plant Code are prompted by international symposia for cultivated plant taxonomy which allow for rulings made by the International Commission on the Nomenclature of Cultivated Plants Each new Cultivated Plant Code includes a summary of the changes made to the previous version and these have also been summarised for the period 1953 to 1995 19 International Association for Cultivated Plant Taxonomy edit nbsp Wisley is one of the Royal Horticultural Society s flagship gardens and a focus for cultivated plant taxonomy Recent concerns have focused on international communication on cultivated plant taxonomy organisation of international symposia and general communication on topics of interest In 1988 a Horticultural Taxonomy Group Hortax nb 1 was formed in the UK and a parallel organisation the Nomenclature and Registration Working Group of the Vaste Keurings Commissie in the Netherlands One development promoting discussion was the newsletter Hortax News which was superseded in February 2006 by the first issue of Hanburyana a journal produced by the Royal Horticultural Society in London and dedicated to horticultural taxonomy This filled a gap left when the American journal Baileya ceased publication in the early 1990s Another development was the launch in 2007 at the Sixth Symposium on the Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants at Wageningen of the International Association for Cultivated Plant Taxonomy Hortax also publishes Plant Names A Guide for Horticulturists Nurserymen Gardeners and Students 61 Presenting cultigen names editMost cultigens have names consisting of a Latin name that is governed by the International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants e g Malus domestica to which is added a cultivar epithet enclosed in single quotes e g Malus domestica Granny Smith The formation and use of the three classification categories ranks used for cultigens the cultivar Group and grex is regulated by the ICNCP Examples of acceptable ways to present cultigen names are given below Prunus serrata Sato zakura Group Prunus serrata Sato zakura Group Ojochin Prunus Ojochin Flowering cherry Ojochin dd dd Contemporary issues edit nbsp Chelsea Physic Garden summer 2006Current challenges for cultivated plant taxonomists include the use of large plant name databases ways of dealing with the use of non scientific names in commerce known as trade designations especially for plant labels in nurseries intellectual property and plants adapting modern technology in particular molecular techniques to the creation and identification of cultivars maintaining germplasm collections of cultivars including herbaria the recording and registration of cultivars 62 The ways in which the plant variation resulting from human activity is named and classified remains contentious The replacement of the expression cultivated plant with the word cultigen is not universally accepted 63 The debate continues concerning the notions of ranks and taxa as applied to cultigens Is it appropriate to call the highly modified transgenic products of human artificial selection taxa in the same way we do for the products of natural selection in the wild To overcome this difficulty the term culton pl culta has been suggested to replace the word taxon when speaking about cultigens 64 65 66 Then most wild plants fit neatly into the nested hierarchy of ranks used in Linnaean classification species into genera genera into families etc which aligns with Darwinian descent with modification Choosing classification categories for cultigens is not clear cut Included among cultigens are simple selections taken from plants in the wild or in cultivation artificial hybrids produced both by accident and intention plants produced by genetic engineering clonal material reproduced by cuttings grafting budding layering etc graft chimaeras selections from the wild ancient selections of crops that date back thousands of years selections of aberrant growth such as witches brooms the results of deliberate repeatable single crosses between two pure lines to produce plants of a particular general appearance that is desirable for horticulture but which are not genetically identical The question remains as to whether the classification categories of cultivar Group and grex are the most appropriate and efficient way to deal with this broad range of plant variation 67 See also editDomestication of plants Horticultural botany List of florilegia and botanical codices Citrus taxonomyFootnotes edit A committee of cultivated plant taxonomists based in the British Isles Archived 2009 12 07 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2010 08 05References edit Cultivated Plant Code Brickell 2009 p 3 McNeill 2004 p 32 Cultivated Plant Code Brickell 2009 p 1 a b Spencer amp Cross 2008 p 165 McNeill 2008 p 25 McNeill 2004 p 31 Cultivated Plant Code Articles 2 amp 3 Brickell 2009 Arber 1986 p 1 Spencer Cross amp Lumley 2007 p 50 Cultivated Plant Code Art 2 3 Brickell 2009 p 1 Spencer Cross amp Lumley 2007 p 47 Spencer Cross amp Lumley 2007 p 53 Stearn 1965a Stearn 1965b pp 279 291 322 341 Stearn 1986 pp 19 28 Brandenburg 1986 pp 109 115 Hetterscheid van den Berg amp Brandenburg 1996 pp 123 134 McNeill 2004 pp 25 36 a b Trehane 2004 pp 17 27 Spencer Cross amp Lumley 2007 p 48 Stearn 1965b p 282 Morton 1981 p 2 Morton 1981 pp 2 3 a b c Stearn 1986 p 19 Stearn 1965b p 325 Morton 1981 p 25 Stuessy 2009 p 21 Stace 1984 p 22 Theophrastus 1916 Pliny s Naturalis historiae Retrieved 2010 08 05 Archived from the original on 2008 09 15 Retrieved 2021 02 20 Dioscorides Materia Medica Retrieved 2010 08 05 Archived from the original on 2008 06 14 Retrieved 2008 06 11 Marcus Cato s De Agri Cultura Retrieved 2010 08 05 a b c Stearn 1986 p 20 Stearn 1965b p 324 Caspar Bauhin s Pinax theatre botanici Retrieved 2010 08 05 Archived from the original on 2016 10 17 Retrieved 2008 06 11 Morton 1981 p 145 John Parkinson s Paradisi in Sole Retrieved 2011 05 04 Morton 1981 pp 165 219 Morton 1981 pp 202 Morton 1981 p 228 Morton 1981 pp 197 204 Miller 1754 Stearn 1992 pp ix x Hunt Botanic Garden account of Linnaeus work Retrieved 2010 08 05 Archived 2012 07 11 at archive today Linnaeus Systema Naturae 13th edition Volume I 532 pages Retrieved 2010 08 05 Linnaeus Species Plantarum Retrieved 2010 08 05 Archived from the original on 2008 05 28 Retrieved 2008 06 13 Aphorism 310 Philosophia Botanica Hort 1938 p 198 Heller 1968 Eng transl Preface to Hortus Cliffortianus Stearn 1965b pp 325 326 de Candolle 1867 Article 40 McNeill 2006 full citation needed Stearn 1986 p 22 Royal Horticultural Society 1911 Bailey 1918 Spencer amp Cross 2007 Bailey 1923 Jirasek 1961 Jeffrey 1968 Brickell 2009 Plant Names A Guide for Horticulturists Nurserymen Gardeners and Students Hortax 2007 Archived 2013 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Andrews amp Leslie 1999 Cultivated Plant Code see footnote Brickell 2009 p 1 Hetterscheid amp Brandenburg 1994 Hetterscheid amp Brandenburg 1995 McNeill 1998 pp 15 22 McNeill 2008Bibliography editAndrews Susyn amp Leslie Alan 1999 Alexander Crinan ed Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants London Royal Botanic Gardens Kew ISBN 978 1 900347 89 1 Arber Agnes 1986 Herbals Their Origin and Evolution a Chapter in the History of Botany 1470 1670 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 33879 0 First published in 1912 Bailey Liberty Hyde 1918 The Indigen and Cultigen Science Series 2 47 1213 306 308 Bibcode 1918Sci 47 306B doi 10 1126 science 47 1213 306 PMID 17757815 Bailey Liberty Hyde 1923 Various Cultigens and Transfers in Nomenclature Gentes Herbarum 1 113 136 Brandenburg Willem A 1986 Classification of cultivated plants Acta Horticulturae 182 182 109 115 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 1986 182 13 S2CID 82109893 Brickell Christopher D ed 2009 International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants ICNCP or Cultivated Plant Code incorporating the Rules and Recommendations for naming plants in cultivation 8th edn adopted by the International Union of Biological Sciences International Commission for the Nomenclature of Cultivated Plants Vol 10 International Society of Horticultural Science pp 1 184 ISBN 978 0 643 09440 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help de Candolle Alphonse 1867 Lois de Nomenclature Botanique Paris Masson Heller John L 1968 Linnaeus s Hortus cliffortianus Taxon 17 6 663 719 doi 10 2307 1218012 JSTOR 1218012 Hort Arthur 1938 The Critica botanica of Linnaeus London Ray Society Hetterscheid Wilbert L A amp Brandenburg Willem A 1994 The Culton Concept Setting the Stage for an Unambiguous Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants Acta Horticulturae 413 29 34 Hetterscheid Wilbert L A amp Brandenburg Willem A 1995 Culton vs Taxon Conceptual Issues in Cultivated Plant Systematics Taxon 44 2 161 175 doi 10 2307 1222439 JSTOR 1222439 Hetterscheid Wilbert L A van den Berg Ronald G amp Brandenburg Willem A 1996 An annotated history of the principles of cultivated plant classification Acta Botanica Neerlandica 45 2 123 134 doi 10 1111 j 1438 8677 1996 tb00504 x archived from the original on 2020 07 29 retrieved 2019 06 30 Jeffrey Charles 1968 Systematic Categories for Cultivated Plants Taxon 17 2 109 114 doi 10 2307 1216498 JSTOR 1216498 Jirasek Vaclav 1961 Evolution of the Proposals of Taxonomical Categories for the Classification of Cultivated Plants Taxon 10 2 34 45 doi 10 2307 1217450 JSTOR 1217450 McNeill John 1998 Culton A Useful Term Questionably Argued Hortax News 1 15 22 McNeill John 2004 Nomenclature of cultivated plants a historical botanical standpoint in C G Davidson and P Trehane eds Proc XXVI IHC IVth International Symposium on the Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants Acta Horticulturae 634 634 29 36 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 2004 634 2 McNeill John 2006 International Code of Botanical Nomenclature Vienna Code adopted by the Seventeenth International Botanical Congress Vienna Austria July 2005 A R G Ruggell Liechtenstein Gantner Verlag McNeill J Barrie F R Buck W R Demoulin V Greuter W Hawksworth D L Herendeen P S Knapp S Marhold K Prado J Prud homme Van Reine W F Smith G F Wiersema J H Turland N J 2012 International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants Melbourne Code adopted by the Eighteenth International Botanical Congress Melbourne Australia July 2011 Vol Regnum Vegetabile 154 A R G Gantner Verlag KG ISBN 978 3 87429 425 6 Archived from the original on 2013 11 04 Retrieved 2014 07 28 McNeill John 2008 The Taxonomy of Cultivated Plants Acta Horticulturae 799 799 21 28 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 2008 799 1 Miller Philip 1754 The Gardener s Dictionary with an introduction by W T Stearn Reprint 1969 abridged New York Verlag von J Cramer Morton Alan G 1981 History of Botanical Science An Account of the Development of Botany from Ancient Times to the Present Day London Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 508382 9 Royal Horticultural Society 1911 Horticultural Code Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society 37 149 151 Spencer Roger amp Cross Robert 2007 The Cultigen Taxon 56 3 938 940 doi 10 2307 25065875 JSTOR 25065875 Spencer Roger Cross Robert amp Lumley Peter 2007 Plant Names A Guide to Botanical Nomenclature Collingwood Victoria CSIRO Publishing ISBN 978 0 643 09440 6 Spencer Roger amp Cross Robert 2008 The Cultigen Acta Horticulturae 799 799 163 167 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 2008 799 23 Stace Clive A 1984 Plant Taxonomy and Biosystematics London Edward Arnold ISBN 978 0 7131 2802 4 Stearn William T 1965a ICNCP It all started in 1952 or did it International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants Address Given by the Secretary W T Stearn of the International Committee on Horticultural Nomenclature and Registration at the Opening Meeting on 7 September 1952 Archived from the original on 18 April 2016 Retrieved 2 December 2011 Stearn William T 1965b The origin and later development of cultivated plants Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society 90 279 291 322 341 Stearn William T 1986 Historical survey of the naming of cultivated plants Acta Horticulturae 182 18 28 Stearn William T 1992 Historical Introduction In Huxley A ed In chief ed The New Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening 4 vols London Macmillan pp ix x ISBN 978 0 333 47494 5 Theophrastus 1916 Enquiry into Plants Books 1 5 Translated by A F Hort Loeb Classical Library ISBN 978 0 674 99077 7 Stuessy Ted F 2009 Plant Taxonomy 2nd ed New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 14712 5 Trehane Piers 2004 50 years of the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants Future prospects for the Code Acta Horticulturae 634 634 17 27 doi 10 17660 ActaHortic 2004 634 1 External links edit2009 ICNCP Code online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cultivated plant taxonomy amp oldid 1175077155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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