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Type (biology)

In biology, a type is a particular specimen (or in some cases a group of specimens) of an organism to which the scientific name of that organism is formally associated. In other words, a type is an example that serves to anchor or centralizes the defining features of that particular taxon. In older usage (pre-1900 in botany), a type was a taxon rather than a specimen.[1]

Type specimen for Marocaster coronatus

A taxon is a scientifically named grouping of organisms with other like organisms, a set that includes some organisms and excludes others, based on a detailed published description (for example a species description) and on the provision of type material, which is usually available to scientists for examination in a major museum research collection, or similar institution.[1][2]

Type specimen edit

According to a precise set of rules laid down in the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) and the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (ICN), the scientific name of every taxon is almost always based on one particular specimen, or in some cases specimens. Types are of great significance to biologists, especially to taxonomists. Types are usually physical specimens that are kept in a museum or herbarium research collection, but failing that, an image of an individual of that taxon has sometimes been designated as a type.[3] Describing species and appointing type specimens is part of scientific nomenclature and alpha taxonomy.

When identifying material, a scientist attempts to apply a taxon name to a specimen or group of specimens based on their understanding of the relevant taxa[clarification needed][citation needed], based on (at least) having read the type description(s)[citation needed], preferably also based on an examination of all the type material of all of the relevant taxa. If there is more than one named type that all appear to be the same taxon, then the oldest name takes precedence and is considered to be the correct name of the material in hand. If on the other hand, the taxon appears never to have been named at all, then the scientist or another qualified expert picks a type specimen and publishes a new name and an official description.[citation needed]

Depending on the nomenclature code applied to the organism in question, a type can be a specimen, a culture, an illustration, or (under the bacteriological code) a description. Some codes consider a subordinate taxon to be the type, but under the botanical code, the type is always a specimen or illustration.

For example, in the research collection of the Natural History Museum in London, there is a bird specimen numbered 1886.6.24.20. This is a specimen of a kind of bird commonly known as the spotted harrier, which currently bears the scientific name Circus assimilis. This particular specimen is the holotype for that species; the name Circus assimilis refers, by definition, to the species of that particular specimen. That species was named and described by Jardine and Selby in 1828, and the holotype was placed in the museum collection so that other scientists might refer to it as necessary.

At least for type specimens there is no requirement for a "typical" individual to be used. Genera and families, particularly those established by early taxonomists, tend to be named after species that are more "typical" for them, but here too this is not always the case and due to changes in systematics cannot be. Hence, the term name-bearing type or onomatophore is sometimes used, to denote the fact that biological types do not define "typical" individuals or taxa, but rather fix a scientific name to a specific operational taxonomic unit. Type specimens are theoretically even allowed to be aberrant or deformed individuals or color variations, though this is rarely chosen to be the case, as it makes it hard to determine to which population the individual belonged.[1][2][4]

The usage of the term type is somewhat complicated by slightly different uses in botany and zoology. In the PhyloCode, type-based definitions are replaced by phylogenetic definitions.

Older terminology edit

In some older taxonomic works the word "type" has sometimes been used differently. The meaning was similar in the first Laws of Botanical Nomenclature,[5][6] but has a meaning closer to the term taxon in some other works:[7]

Ce seul caractère permet de distinguer ce type de toutes les autres espèces de la section. … Après avoir étudié ces diverses formes, j'en arrivai à les considérer comme appartenant à un seul et même type spécifique.

Translation: This single character permits [one to] distinguish this type from all other species of the section ... After studying the diverse forms, I came to consider them as belonging to the one and the same specific type.

In botany edit

In botanical nomenclature, a type (typus, nomenclatural type), "is that element to which the name of a taxon is permanently attached." (article 7.2)[8] In botany a type is either a specimen or an illustration. A specimen is a real plant (or one or more parts of a plant or a lot of small plants), dead and kept safe, "curated", in a herbarium (or the equivalent for fungi). Examples of where an illustration may serve as a type include:

  • A detailed drawing, painting, etc., depicting the plant, from the early days of plant taxonomy. A dried plant was difficult to transport and hard to keep safe for the future; many specimens from the early days of botany have since been lost or damaged. Highly skilled botanical artists were sometimes employed by a botanist to make faithful and detailed illustrations. Some such illustrations have become the best record and have been chosen to serve as the type of taxon.
  • A detailed picture of something that can be seen only through a microscope. A tiny "plant" on a microscope slide makes for a poor type: the microscope slide may be lost or damaged, or it may be very difficult to find the "plant" in question among whatever else is on the microscope slide. An illustration makes for a much more reliable type (Art 37.5 of the Vienna Code, 2006).

A type does not determine the circumscription of the taxon. For example, the common dandelion is a controversial taxon: some botanists consider it to consist of over a hundred species, and others regard it as a single species. The type of the name Taraxacum officinale is the same whether the circumscription of the species includes all those small species (Taraxacum officinale is a "big" species) or whether the circumscription is limited to only one small species among the other hundred (Taraxacum officinale is a "small" species). The name Taraxacum officinale is the same and the type of the name is the same, but the extent to which the name actually applies varies greatly. Setting the circumscription of a taxon is done by a taxonomist in a publication.

Miscellaneous notes:

  1. Only a species or an infraspecific taxon can have a type of its own. For most new taxa (published on or after 1 January 2007, article 37) at these ranks, a type should not be an illustration.
  2. A genus has the same type as that of one of its species (article 10).
  3. A family has the same type as that of one of its genera (article 10).

The ICN provides a listing of the various kinds of types (article 9 and the Glossary),[8] the most important of which is the holotype. These are

  • holotype – the single specimen or illustration that the author(s) clearly indicated to be the nomenclatural type of a name
  • lectotype – a specimen or illustration designated from the original material as the nomenclatural type when there was no holotype specified or the holotype has been lost or destroyed
  • isotype – a duplicate of the holotype
  • syntype – any specimen (or illustration) cited in the original description when there is no holotype, or any one of two or more specimens simultaneously designated as types
  • paratype – any specimen (or illustration) cited in the original description that is not the holotype nor an isotype, nor one of the syntypes
  • neotype – a specimen or illustration selected to serve as nomenclatural type if no material from the original description is available
  • epitype – a specimen or illustration selected to serve as an interpretative type, usually when another kind of type does not show the critical features needed for identification

The word "type" appears in botanical literature as a part of some older terms that have no status under the ICN: for example a clonotype.

In zoology edit

 
A gossamer-winged butterfly, Jamides elioti:
1) dorsal and 2) ventral aspect of holotype,
3) dorsal and 4) ventral aspect of paratype

In zoological nomenclature, the type of a species or subspecies is a specimen or series of specimens. The type of a genus or subgenus is a species. The type of a suprageneric taxon (e.g., family, etc.) is a genus. Names higher than superfamily rank do not have types. A "name-bearing type" is a specimen or image that "provides the objective standard of reference whereby the application of the name of a nominal taxon can be determined."

Definitions edit

  • A type specimen is a vernacular term (not a formally defined term) typically used for an individual or fossil that is any of the various name-bearing types for a species. For example, the type specimen for the species Homo neanderthalensis was the specimen "Neanderthal-1" discovered by Johann Karl Fuhlrott in 1856 at Feldhofer in the Neander Valley in Germany, consisting of a skullcap, thigh bones, part of a pelvis, some ribs, and some arm and shoulder bones. There may be more than one type specimen, but there is (at least in modern times) only one holotype.
  • A type species is the nominal species that is the name-bearing type of a nominal genus or subgenus.
  • A type genus is the nominal genus that is the name-bearing type of a nominal family-group taxon.
  • The type series are all those specimens included by the author in a taxon's formal description, unless the author explicitly or implicitly excludes them as part of the series.

Use of type specimens edit

 
Type illustration of Mormopterus acetabulosus

Although in reality biologists may examine many specimens (when available) of a new taxon before writing an official published species description, nonetheless, under the formal rules for naming species (the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature), a single type must be designated, as part of the published description.

A type description must include a diagnosis (typically, a discussion of similarities to and differences from closely related species), and an indication of where the type specimen or specimens are deposited for examination. The geographical location where a type specimen was originally found is known as its type locality. In the case of parasites, the term type host (or symbiotype) is used to indicate the host organism from which the type specimen was obtained.[9]

Zoological collections are maintained by universities and museums. Ensuring that types are kept in good condition and made available for examination by taxonomists are two important functions of such collections. And, while there is only one holotype designated, there can be other "type" specimens, the following of which are formally defined:

Holotype edit

When a single specimen is clearly designated in the original description, this specimen is known as the holotype of that species. The holotype is typically placed in a major museum, or similar well-known public collection, so that it is freely available for later examination by other biologists.

Paratype edit

When the original description designated a holotype, there may be additional specimens that the author designates as additional representatives of the same species, termed paratypes. These are not name-bearing types.

Allotype edit

An allotype is a specimen of the opposite sex to the holotype, designated from among paratypes. The word was also formerly used for a specimen that shows features not seen in the holotype of a fossil.[10] The term is not regulated by the ICZN.

Neotype edit

A neotype is a specimen later selected to serve as the single type specimen when an original holotype has been lost or destroyed or where the original author never cited a specimen.

Syntype edit

A syntype is any one of two or more specimens that is listed in a species description where no holotype was designated; historically, syntypes were often explicitly designated as such, and under the present ICZN this is a requirement, but modern attempts to publish species description based on syntypes are generally frowned upon by practicing taxonomists, and most are gradually being replaced by lectotypes. Those that still exist are still considered name-bearing types.

Lectotype edit

A lectotype is a specimen later selected to serve as the single type specimen for species originally described from a set of syntypes. In zoology, a lectotype is a kind of name-bearing type. When a species was originally described on the basis of a name-bearing type consisting of multiple specimens, one of those may be designated as the lectotype. Having a single name-bearing type reduces the potential for confusion, especially considering that it is not uncommon for a series of syntypes to contain specimens of more than one species.

A notable example is a suggestion that Carl Linnaeus should constitute the lectotype for the species Homo sapiens.[11]

Paralectotype edit

A paralectotype is any additional specimen from among a set of syntypes after a lectotype has been designated from among them. These are not name-bearing types.[12]

Hapantotype edit

A special case in Protistans where the type consists of two or more specimens of "directly related individuals representing distinct stages in the life cycle"; these are collectively treated as a single entity, and lectotypes cannot be designated from among them.

Iconotype edit

An illustration on which a new species or subspecies was based. For instance, the Burmese python, Python bivittatus, is one of many species that are based on illustrations by Albertus Seba (1734).[13][14]

Ergatotype edit

An ergatotype is a specimen selected to represent a worker member in hymenopterans which have polymorphic castes.[10]

Hypotype edit

A hypotype is a specimen whose details have previously been published that is used in a supplementary figure or description of the species.[15]

Kleptotype edit

The term "kleptotype" informally refers to a type specimen or a part of it that has been stolen, or improperly relocated.[16][17][18][19]

Alternatives to preserved specimens edit

Type illustrations have also been used by zoologists, as in the case of the Réunion parakeet, which is known only from historical illustrations and descriptions.[20]: 24 

Recently, some species have been described where the type specimen was released alive back into the wild, such as the Bulo Burti boubou (a bushshrike), described as Laniarius liberatus, in which the species description included DNA sequences from blood and feather samples. Assuming there is no future question as to the status of such a species, the absence of a type specimen does not invalidate the name, but it may be necessary for the future to designate a neotype for such a taxon, should any questions arise. However, in the case of the bushshrike, ornithologists have argued that the specimen was a rare and hitherto unknown color morph of a long-known species, using only the available blood and feather samples. While there is still some debate on the need to deposit actual killed individuals as type specimens, it can be observed that given proper vouchering and storage, tissue samples can be just as valuable should dispute about the validity of a species arise.

Formalisation of the type system edit

The various types listed above are necessary[citation needed] because many species were described one or two centuries ago, when a single type specimen, a holotype, was often not designated. Also, types were not always carefully preserved, and intervening events such as wars and fires have resulted in the destruction of the original type material. The validity of a species name often rests upon the availability of original type specimens; or, if the type cannot be found, or one has never existed, upon the clarity of the description.

The ICZN has existed only since 1961 when the first edition of the Code was published. The ICZN does not always demand a type specimen for the historical validity of a species, and many "type-less" species do exist. The current edition of the Code, Article 75.3, prohibits the designation of a neotype unless there is "an exceptional need" for "clarifying the taxonomic status" of a species (Article 75.2).

There are many other permutations and variations on terms using the suffix "-type" (e.g., allotype, cotype, topotype, generitype, isotype, isoneotype, isolectotype, etc.) but these are not formally regulated by the Code, and a great many are obsolete and/or idiosyncratic. However, some of these categories can potentially apply to genuine type specimens, such as a neotype; e.g., isotypic/topotypic specimens are preferred to other specimens, when they are available at the time a neotype is chosen (because they are from the same time and/or place as the original type).

The term fixation is used by the Code for the declaration of a name-bearing type, whether by original or subsequent designation.

Type species edit

 
The common toad, Bufo bufo described by Linnaeus, is the type species for the genus Bufo

Each genus must have a designated type species (the term "genotype" was once used for this but has been abandoned because the word has become much better known as the term for a different concept in genetics). The description of a genus is usually based primarily on its type species, modified and expanded by the features of other included species. The generic name is permanently associated with the name-bearing type of its type species.

Ideally, a type species best exemplifies the essential characteristics of the genus to which it belongs, but this is subjective and, ultimately, technically irrelevant, as it is not a requirement of the Code. If the type species proves, upon closer examination, to belong to a pre-existing genus (a common occurrence), then all of the constituent species must be either moved into the pre-existing genus or disassociated from the original type species and given a new generic name; the old generic name passes into synonymy and is abandoned unless there is a pressing need to make an exception (decided case-by-case, via petition to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature).[citation needed]

Type genus edit

A type genus is a genus from which the name of a family or subfamily is formed. As with type species, the type genus is not necessarily the most representative but is usually the earliest described, largest or best-known genus. It is not uncommon for the name of a family to be based upon the name of a type genus that has passed into synonymy; the family name does not need to be changed in such a situation.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Hitchcock, A.S. (1921), "The Type Concept in Systematic Botany", American Journal of Botany, 8 (5): 251–255, doi:10.2307/2434993, JSTOR 2434993
  2. ^ a b Nicholson, Dan H. "Botanical nomenclature, types, & standard reference works". Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Department of Botany. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  3. ^ Marshall, Stephen A.; Evenhuis, Neal L. (2015). "New species without dead bodies: a case for photo-based descriptions, illustrated by a striking new species of Marleyimyia Hesse (Diptera, Bombyliidae) from South Africa". ZooKeys (525): 117–127. doi:10.3897/zookeys.525.6143. ISSN 1313-2970. PMC 4607853. PMID 26487819.
  4. ^ "Plant names – a basic introduction". Australian National Botanic Gardens, Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  5. ^ de Candolle, A.P. (1867). Lois de la nomenclature botanique adoptées par le Congrès International de Botanique tenu à Paris en août 1867 suivies d'une deuxième édition de l'introduction historique et du commentaire qui accompagnaient la rédaction préparatoire présentée à la congrès. Genève et Bale: J.-B. Baillière et fils.
  6. ^ Weddell (1868). "Laws of Botanical Nomenclature adopted by the International Botanical Congress held at Paris in August 1867; together with an Historical Introduction and Commentary by Alphonse de Candolle, Translated from the French; Reprinted from the English translation published by L. Reeve and Co., London, 1868 (with three-page commentary by Asa Gray)". The American Journal of Science and Arts. Series II, Volume 46 (63–74, 75–77).
  7. ^ Crépin, F. (1886). "Rosa Synstylae: études sur les roses de la section Synstyleés". Bulletin de la Société Royale de Botanique de Belgique. 25 (2: Comptes-redus des séances de la Société Royale de Botanique de Belgique): 163–217.
  8. ^ a b 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.
  9. ^ Frey, Jennifer K.; Yates, Terry L.; Duszynski, Donald W.; Gannon, William L. & Gardner, Scott L. (1992). "Designation and Curatorial Management of Type Host Specimens (Symbiotypes) for New Parasite Species". The Journal of Parasitology. 78 (5): 930–993. doi:10.2307/3283335. JSTOR 3283335. S2CID 82003952.
  10. ^ a b Hawksworth, D.L. (2010). Terms Used in Bionomenclature. The naming of organisms (and plant communities). Copenhagen: Global Biodiversity Information Facility. p. 216. ISBN 978-87-92020-09-3.
  11. ^ Stearn, W. T. (1 March 1959). "The Background of Linnaeus's Contributions to the Nomenclature and Methods of Systematic Biology". Systematic Biology. 8 (1): 4–22. doi:10.2307/sysbio/8.1.4. ISSN 1063-5157.
  12. ^ Hansen, Hans V.; Seberg, Ole (1984). "Paralectotype, a new type term in botany". Taxon. 33 (4): 707–711. doi:10.2307/1220790. JSTOR 1220790.
  13. ^ Seba, Albertus (1734). Locupletissimi Rerum naturalium Thesauri accurata Descriptio, et Iconibus artificiosissimus Expressio, per universam Physices Historiam. Opus, cui in hoc Rerum Genere, nullum par exstitit. Amsterdam: Janssonio-Waesbergios.
  14. ^ Bauer, Aaron M. (2002). "Albertus Seba, Cabinet of Natural Curiosities. The Complete Plates in Colour, 1734–1765. 2001". International Society for the History and Bibliography of Herpetology. 3.
  15. ^ "Compendium of Types". University of Basel.
  16. ^ Baker, N. T., & Timm, R. M. (1976). "Modern type concepts in entomology." Journal of the New York Entomological Society, 201-205.
  17. ^ Glime, J. M., & Wagner, D. H. (2013). "Herbarium methods and exchanges."
  18. ^ Kleptotype. (n.d.). Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias. Retrieved November 21, 2022, from https://en_ichthyology.en-academic.com/9763/kleptotype
  19. ^ "Terms Used in Bionomenclature: The Naming of Organisms and Plant Communities : Including Terms Used in Botanical, Cultivated Plant, Phylogenetic, Phytosociological, Prokaryote (bacteriological), Virus, and Zoological Nomenclature." (2010). United Kingdom: Global Biodiversity Information Facility.
  20. ^ Hume, Julian Pender (25 June 2007). "Reappraisal of the parrots (Aves: Psittacidae) from the Mascarene Islands, with comments on their ecology, morphology, and affinities" (PDF). Zootaxa. 1513 (1513): 1–76. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.1513.1.1. ISSN 1175-5334. Retrieved 13 January 2011.

External links edit

  • ICZN Code: International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, the official website
  • Glossary section (archived)
  • (archived)
  • Zoological Type Nomenclature (Evenhuis) (PDF)

type, biology, biology, type, particular, specimen, some, cases, group, specimens, organism, which, scientific, name, that, organism, formally, associated, other, words, type, example, that, serves, anchor, centralizes, defining, features, that, particular, ta. In biology a type is a particular specimen or in some cases a group of specimens of an organism to which the scientific name of that organism is formally associated In other words a type is an example that serves to anchor or centralizes the defining features of that particular taxon In older usage pre 1900 in botany a type was a taxon rather than a specimen 1 Type specimen for Marocaster coronatusA taxon is a scientifically named grouping of organisms with other like organisms a set that includes some organisms and excludes others based on a detailed published description for example a species description and on the provision of type material which is usually available to scientists for examination in a major museum research collection or similar institution 1 2 Contents 1 Type specimen 2 Older terminology 3 In botany 4 In zoology 4 1 Definitions 4 2 Use of type specimens 4 2 1 Holotype 4 2 2 Paratype 4 2 3 Allotype 4 2 4 Neotype 4 2 5 Syntype 4 2 6 Lectotype 4 2 7 Paralectotype 4 2 8 Hapantotype 4 2 9 Iconotype 4 2 10 Ergatotype 4 2 11 Hypotype 4 2 12 Kleptotype 4 2 13 Alternatives to preserved specimens 4 2 14 Formalisation of the type system 4 3 Type species 4 4 Type genus 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksType specimen edit Type specimen redirects here For the mineralogy term see type specimen mineralogy According to a precise set of rules laid down in the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature ICZN and the International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants ICN the scientific name of every taxon is almost always based on one particular specimen or in some cases specimens Types are of great significance to biologists especially to taxonomists Types are usually physical specimens that are kept in a museum or herbarium research collection but failing that an image of an individual of that taxon has sometimes been designated as a type 3 Describing species and appointing type specimens is part of scientific nomenclature and alpha taxonomy When identifying material a scientist attempts to apply a taxon name to a specimen or group of specimens based on their understanding of the relevant taxa clarification needed citation needed based on at least having read the type description s citation needed preferably also based on an examination of all the type material of all of the relevant taxa If there is more than one named type that all appear to be the same taxon then the oldest name takes precedence and is considered to be the correct name of the material in hand If on the other hand the taxon appears never to have been named at all then the scientist or another qualified expert picks a type specimen and publishes a new name and an official description citation needed Depending on the nomenclature code applied to the organism in question a type can be a specimen a culture an illustration or under the bacteriological code a description Some codes consider a subordinate taxon to be the type but under the botanical code the type is always a specimen or illustration For example in the research collection of the Natural History Museum in London there is a bird specimen numbered 1886 6 24 20 This is a specimen of a kind of bird commonly known as the spotted harrier which currently bears the scientific name Circus assimilis This particular specimen is the holotype for that species the name Circus assimilis refers by definition to the species of that particular specimen That species was named and described by Jardine and Selby in 1828 and the holotype was placed in the museum collection so that other scientists might refer to it as necessary At least for type specimens there is no requirement for a typical individual to be used Genera and families particularly those established by early taxonomists tend to be named after species that are more typical for them but here too this is not always the case and due to changes in systematics cannot be Hence the term name bearing type or onomatophore is sometimes used to denote the fact that biological types do not define typical individuals or taxa but rather fix a scientific name to a specific operational taxonomic unit Type specimens are theoretically even allowed to be aberrant or deformed individuals or color variations though this is rarely chosen to be the case as it makes it hard to determine to which population the individual belonged 1 2 4 The usage of the term type is somewhat complicated by slightly different uses in botany and zoology In the PhyloCode type based definitions are replaced by phylogenetic definitions Older terminology editIn some older taxonomic works the word type has sometimes been used differently The meaning was similar in the first Laws of Botanical Nomenclature 5 6 but has a meaning closer to the term taxon in some other works 7 Ce seul caractere permet de distinguer ce type de toutes les autres especes de la section Apres avoir etudie ces diverses formes j en arrivai a les considerer comme appartenant a un seul et meme type specifique Translation This single character permits one to distinguish this type from all other species of the section After studying the diverse forms I came to consider them as belonging to the one and the same specific type In botany editIn botanical nomenclature a type typus nomenclatural type is that element to which the name of a taxon is permanently attached article 7 2 8 In botany a type is either a specimen or an illustration A specimen is a real plant or one or more parts of a plant or a lot of small plants dead and kept safe curated in a herbarium or the equivalent for fungi Examples of where an illustration may serve as a type include A detailed drawing painting etc depicting the plant from the early days of plant taxonomy A dried plant was difficult to transport and hard to keep safe for the future many specimens from the early days of botany have since been lost or damaged Highly skilled botanical artists were sometimes employed by a botanist to make faithful and detailed illustrations Some such illustrations have become the best record and have been chosen to serve as the type of taxon A detailed picture of something that can be seen only through a microscope A tiny plant on a microscope slide makes for a poor type the microscope slide may be lost or damaged or it may be very difficult to find the plant in question among whatever else is on the microscope slide An illustration makes for a much more reliable type Art 37 5 of the Vienna Code 2006 A type does not determine the circumscription of the taxon For example the common dandelion is a controversial taxon some botanists consider it to consist of over a hundred species and others regard it as a single species The type of the name Taraxacum officinale is the same whether the circumscription of the species includes all those small species Taraxacum officinale is a big species or whether the circumscription is limited to only one small species among the other hundred Taraxacum officinale is a small species The name Taraxacum officinale is the same and the type of the name is the same but the extent to which the name actually applies varies greatly Setting the circumscription of a taxon is done by a taxonomist in a publication Miscellaneous notes Only a species or an infraspecific taxon can have a type of its own For most new taxa published on or after 1 January 2007 article 37 at these ranks a type should not be an illustration A genus has the same type as that of one of its species article 10 A family has the same type as that of one of its genera article 10 The ICN provides a listing of the various kinds of types article 9 and the Glossary 8 the most important of which is the holotype These are holotype the single specimen or illustration that the author s clearly indicated to be the nomenclatural type of a name lectotype a specimen or illustration designated from the original material as the nomenclatural type when there was no holotype specified or the holotype has been lost or destroyed isotype a duplicate of the holotype syntype any specimen or illustration cited in the original description when there is no holotype or any one of two or more specimens simultaneously designated as types paratype any specimen or illustration cited in the original description that is not the holotype nor an isotype nor one of the syntypes neotype a specimen or illustration selected to serve as nomenclatural type if no material from the original description is available epitype a specimen or illustration selected to serve as an interpretative type usually when another kind of type does not show the critical features needed for identificationThe word type appears in botanical literature as a part of some older terms that have no status under the ICN for example a clonotype In zoology edit nbsp A gossamer winged butterfly Jamides elioti 1 dorsal and 2 ventral aspect of holotype 3 dorsal and 4 ventral aspect of paratypeIn zoological nomenclature the type of a species or subspecies is a specimen or series of specimens The type of a genus or subgenus is a species The type of a suprageneric taxon e g family etc is a genus Names higher than superfamily rank do not have types A name bearing type is a specimen or image that provides the objective standard of reference whereby the application of the name of a nominal taxon can be determined Definitions edit A type specimen is a vernacular term not a formally defined term typically used for an individual or fossil that is any of the various name bearing types for a species For example the type specimen for the species Homo neanderthalensis was the specimen Neanderthal 1 discovered by Johann Karl Fuhlrott in 1856 at Feldhofer in the Neander Valley in Germany consisting of a skullcap thigh bones part of a pelvis some ribs and some arm and shoulder bones There may be more than one type specimen but there is at least in modern times only one holotype A type species is the nominal species that is the name bearing type of a nominal genus or subgenus A type genus is the nominal genus that is the name bearing type of a nominal family group taxon The type series are all those specimens included by the author in a taxon s formal description unless the author explicitly or implicitly excludes them as part of the series Use of type specimens edit nbsp Type illustration of Mormopterus acetabulosusAlthough in reality biologists may examine many specimens when available of a new taxon before writing an official published species description nonetheless under the formal rules for naming species the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature a single type must be designated as part of the published description A type description must include a diagnosis typically a discussion of similarities to and differences from closely related species and an indication of where the type specimen or specimens are deposited for examination The geographical location where a type specimen was originally found is known as its type locality In the case of parasites the term type host or symbiotype is used to indicate the host organism from which the type specimen was obtained 9 Zoological collections are maintained by universities and museums Ensuring that types are kept in good condition and made available for examination by taxonomists are two important functions of such collections And while there is only one holotype designated there can be other type specimens the following of which are formally defined Holotype edit Main article Holotype When a single specimen is clearly designated in the original description this specimen is known as the holotype of that species The holotype is typically placed in a major museum or similar well known public collection so that it is freely available for later examination by other biologists Paratype edit Main article Paratype When the original description designated a holotype there may be additional specimens that the author designates as additional representatives of the same species termed paratypes These are not name bearing types Allotype edit An allotype is a specimen of the opposite sex to the holotype designated from among paratypes The word was also formerly used for a specimen that shows features not seen in the holotype of a fossil 10 The term is not regulated by the ICZN Neotype edit A neotype is a specimen later selected to serve as the single type specimen when an original holotype has been lost or destroyed or where the original author never cited a specimen Syntype edit Main article Syntype A syntype is any one of two or more specimens that is listed in a species description where no holotype was designated historically syntypes were often explicitly designated as such and under the present ICZN this is a requirement but modern attempts to publish species description based on syntypes are generally frowned upon by practicing taxonomists and most are gradually being replaced by lectotypes Those that still exist are still considered name bearing types Lectotype edit A lectotype is a specimen later selected to serve as the single type specimen for species originally described from a set of syntypes In zoology a lectotype is a kind of name bearing type When a species was originally described on the basis of a name bearing type consisting of multiple specimens one of those may be designated as the lectotype Having a single name bearing type reduces the potential for confusion especially considering that it is not uncommon for a series of syntypes to contain specimens of more than one species A notable example is a suggestion that Carl Linnaeus should constitute the lectotype for the species Homo sapiens 11 Paralectotype edit A paralectotype is any additional specimen from among a set of syntypes after a lectotype has been designated from among them These are not name bearing types 12 Hapantotype edit A special case in Protistans where the type consists of two or more specimens of directly related individuals representing distinct stages in the life cycle these are collectively treated as a single entity and lectotypes cannot be designated from among them Iconotype edit An illustration on which a new species or subspecies was based For instance the Burmese python Python bivittatus is one of many species that are based on illustrations by Albertus Seba 1734 13 14 Ergatotype edit An ergatotype is a specimen selected to represent a worker member in hymenopterans which have polymorphic castes 10 Hypotype edit Hypotype redirects here For the moth see Hypotype genus A hypotype is a specimen whose details have previously been published that is used in a supplementary figure or description of the species 15 Kleptotype edit The term kleptotype informally refers to a type specimen or a part of it that has been stolen or improperly relocated 16 17 18 19 Alternatives to preserved specimens edit Type illustrations have also been used by zoologists as in the case of the Reunion parakeet which is known only from historical illustrations and descriptions 20 24 Recently some species have been described where the type specimen was released alive back into the wild such as the Bulo Burti boubou a bushshrike described as Laniarius liberatus in which the species description included DNA sequences from blood and feather samples Assuming there is no future question as to the status of such a species the absence of a type specimen does not invalidate the name but it may be necessary for the future to designate a neotype for such a taxon should any questions arise However in the case of the bushshrike ornithologists have argued that the specimen was a rare and hitherto unknown color morph of a long known species using only the available blood and feather samples While there is still some debate on the need to deposit actual killed individuals as type specimens it can be observed that given proper vouchering and storage tissue samples can be just as valuable should dispute about the validity of a species arise Formalisation of the type system edit The various types listed above are necessary citation needed because many species were described one or two centuries ago when a single type specimen a holotype was often not designated Also types were not always carefully preserved and intervening events such as wars and fires have resulted in the destruction of the original type material The validity of a species name often rests upon the availability of original type specimens or if the type cannot be found or one has never existed upon the clarity of the description The ICZN has existed only since 1961 when the first edition of the Code was published The ICZN does not always demand a type specimen for the historical validity of a species and many type less species do exist The current edition of the Code Article 75 3 prohibits the designation of a neotype unless there is an exceptional need for clarifying the taxonomic status of a species Article 75 2 There are many other permutations and variations on terms using the suffix type e g allotype cotype topotype generitype isotype isoneotype isolectotype etc but these are not formally regulated by the Code and a great many are obsolete and or idiosyncratic However some of these categories can potentially apply to genuine type specimens such as a neotype e g isotypic topotypic specimens are preferred to other specimens when they are available at the time a neotype is chosen because they are from the same time and or place as the original type The term fixation is used by the Code for the declaration of a name bearing type whether by original or subsequent designation Type species edit Main article Type species nbsp The common toad Bufo bufo described by Linnaeus is the type species for the genus BufoEach genus must have a designated type species the term genotype was once used for this but has been abandoned because the word has become much better known as the term for a different concept in genetics The description of a genus is usually based primarily on its type species modified and expanded by the features of other included species The generic name is permanently associated with the name bearing type of its type species Ideally a type species best exemplifies the essential characteristics of the genus to which it belongs but this is subjective and ultimately technically irrelevant as it is not a requirement of the Code If the type species proves upon closer examination to belong to a pre existing genus a common occurrence then all of the constituent species must be either moved into the pre existing genus or disassociated from the original type species and given a new generic name the old generic name passes into synonymy and is abandoned unless there is a pressing need to make an exception decided case by case via petition to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature citation needed Type genus edit Main article Type genus A type genus is a genus from which the name of a family or subfamily is formed As with type species the type genus is not necessarily the most representative but is usually the earliest described largest or best known genus It is not uncommon for the name of a family to be based upon the name of a type genus that has passed into synonymy the family name does not need to be changed in such a situation See also editArchetype Glossary of scientific naming Nomen dubium zoology Nomen nudum Genetypes genetic sequence data from type specimens Pathotype a type of intrasubspecific taxon of pathogenic bacteria Principle of typificationReferences edit a b c Hitchcock A S 1921 The Type Concept in Systematic Botany American Journal of Botany 8 5 251 255 doi 10 2307 2434993 JSTOR 2434993 a b Nicholson Dan H Botanical nomenclature types amp standard reference works Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History Department of Botany Retrieved 17 November 2015 Marshall Stephen A Evenhuis Neal L 2015 New species without dead bodies a case for photo based descriptions illustrated by a striking new species of Marleyimyia Hesse Diptera Bombyliidae from South Africa ZooKeys 525 117 127 doi 10 3897 zookeys 525 6143 ISSN 1313 2970 PMC 4607853 PMID 26487819 Plant names a basic introduction Australian National Botanic Gardens Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research Retrieved 17 November 2015 de Candolle A P 1867 Lois de la nomenclature botanique adoptees par le Congres International de Botanique tenu a Paris en aout 1867 suivies d une deuxieme edition de l introduction historique et du commentaire qui accompagnaient la redaction preparatoire presentee a la congres Geneve et Bale J B Bailliere et fils Weddell 1868 Laws of Botanical Nomenclature adopted by the International Botanical Congress held at Paris in August 1867 together with an Historical Introduction and Commentary by Alphonse de Candolle Translated from the French Reprinted from the English translation published by L Reeve and Co London 1868 with three page commentary by Asa Gray The American Journal of Science and Arts Series II Volume 46 63 74 75 77 Crepin F 1886 Rosa Synstylae etudes sur les roses de la section Synstylees Bulletin de la Societe Royale de Botanique de Belgique 25 2 Comptes redus des seances de la Societe Royale de Botanique de Belgique 163 217 a b 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 Frey Jennifer K Yates Terry L Duszynski Donald W Gannon William L amp Gardner Scott L 1992 Designation and Curatorial Management of Type Host Specimens Symbiotypes for New Parasite Species The Journal of Parasitology 78 5 930 993 doi 10 2307 3283335 JSTOR 3283335 S2CID 82003952 a b Hawksworth D L 2010 Terms Used in Bionomenclature The naming of organisms and plant communities Copenhagen Global Biodiversity Information Facility p 216 ISBN 978 87 92020 09 3 Stearn W T 1 March 1959 The Background of Linnaeus s Contributions to the Nomenclature and Methods of Systematic Biology Systematic Biology 8 1 4 22 doi 10 2307 sysbio 8 1 4 ISSN 1063 5157 Hansen Hans V Seberg Ole 1984 Paralectotype a new type term in botany Taxon 33 4 707 711 doi 10 2307 1220790 JSTOR 1220790 Seba Albertus 1734 Locupletissimi Rerum naturalium Thesauri accurata Descriptio et Iconibus artificiosissimus Expressio per universam Physices Historiam Opus cui in hoc Rerum Genere nullum par exstitit Amsterdam Janssonio Waesbergios Bauer Aaron M 2002 Albertus Seba Cabinet of Natural Curiosities The Complete Plates in Colour 1734 1765 2001 International Society for the History and Bibliography of Herpetology 3 Compendium of Types University of Basel Baker N T amp Timm R M 1976 Modern type concepts in entomology Journal of the New York Entomological Society 201 205 Glime J M amp Wagner D H 2013 Herbarium methods and exchanges Kleptotype n d Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias Retrieved November 21 2022 from https en ichthyology en academic com 9763 kleptotype Terms Used in Bionomenclature The Naming of Organisms and Plant Communities Including Terms Used in Botanical Cultivated Plant Phylogenetic Phytosociological Prokaryote bacteriological Virus and Zoological Nomenclature 2010 United Kingdom Global Biodiversity Information Facility Hume Julian Pender 25 June 2007 Reappraisal of the parrots Aves Psittacidae from the Mascarene Islands with comments on their ecology morphology and affinities PDF Zootaxa 1513 1513 1 76 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 1513 1 1 ISSN 1175 5334 Retrieved 13 January 2011 External links editICZN Code International Code of Zoological Nomenclature the official website Fishbase Glossary section archived A compendium of terms archived Zoological Type Nomenclature Evenhuis PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Type biology amp oldid 1193946511 Type specimen, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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