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Appendices & Glossary - Botanical Research Institute of Texas

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APPENDIX SEVEN<br />

CHANGES IN THE SCIENTIFIC NAMES OF PLANTS 1<br />

One <strong>of</strong> the most important goals <strong>of</strong> plant taxonomy is to develop a uniform, practical, and stable system<br />

<strong>of</strong> naming plants—one that can be used by both taxonomists and others needing a way to communicate<br />

information about plants. The internationally accepted system <strong>of</strong> giving scientific names to<br />

plants is set forth in the International Code <strong>of</strong> <strong>Botanical</strong> Nomenclature (Greuter et al. 1994), <strong>of</strong>ten referred<br />

to simply as the Code.<br />

Why then do scientific names keep changing? Names <strong>of</strong> plants are changed for three main reasons:<br />

▪ There are changes due to legalistic reasons involving the accepted rules <strong>of</strong> nomenclature as outlined<br />

in the Code. For example, the oldest validly published name for a species must be used. Thus, even<br />

though a plant is widely known by a particular scientific name, if an older, validly published name<br />

for the plant comes to light, the older name must be used unless a later name is <strong>of</strong>ficially conserved<br />

(this is referred to as the “rule <strong>of</strong> priority”). While such changes may be inconvenient, without strict<br />

application <strong>of</strong> nomenclatural rules, scientific names would become as inexact and useless for communication<br />

as common names. It should be kept in mind that a particular plant species can have<br />

numerous common names in a small geographic area (e.g., a state) and dozens <strong>of</strong> different common<br />

names in different languages and different countries.<br />

▪ There are changes resulting from shifts in taxonomic philosophies, such as those exemplified by<br />

“splitters” and “lumpers,” or the rejection <strong>of</strong> paraphyletic groups (for more details see Appendix 5 on<br />

Taxonomy, Classification, and the Debate about Cladistics).<br />

▪ Most important, however, are those changes resulting from an increased understanding <strong>of</strong> the plant<br />

species themselves. Initial hypotheses on what species exist, and what their diagnostic characteristics<br />

are, are sometimes based on a limited number <strong>of</strong> specimens, little or no experience with the species<br />

in the field, and little additional information. These hypotheses are tested whenever more specimens<br />

become available for examination, when field work is carried out, or when additional studies<br />

are done (including molecular studies, electron microscopy, breeding studies, etc.). Sometimes the<br />

initial hypotheses are supported and no name changes are necessary. In other instances the hypotheses<br />

need to be modified to reflect the new evidence (e.g., a plant actually belongs in a different genus<br />

or species). This in turn can affect the scientific nomenclature. Ongoing name changes therefore do<br />

not indicate simple equivocation on the part <strong>of</strong> taxonomists, but rather are an accurate reflection <strong>of</strong><br />

the dynamic nature <strong>of</strong> our scientific understanding <strong>of</strong> the plant kingdom.<br />

In order to minimize the impact <strong>of</strong> nomenclatural changes on users <strong>of</strong> this book, we have typically<br />

given taxonomic synonyms (particularly commonly used ones) for those species whose names have<br />

changed in the recent past. Such synonyms can be found in brackets, [ ], near the end <strong>of</strong> the species<br />

treatments and can be reached using the index.<br />

This write up was modified from one written by B. Ertter (pers. comm.).<br />

1 Reprinted from Diggs et al. (1999).

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