Slow progress in mending the laws of botanical nomenclature

IF 13.9 1区 生物学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Kevin R. Thiele, Gideon F. Smith
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Abstract

Accuracy and clarity in the names of species are achieved through globally agreed rules: the various international codes of nomenclature. For plants, proposed amendments to these rules1 are debated during a week-long side meeting of the International Botanical Congress, which is held once every six years — most recently in Madrid in mid-July 2024 (ref. 2). Amendments accepted by delegates to that meeting will be included in the next published International Code of Nomenclature for Algae, Fungi, and Plants (hereafter, Code), due in 2025. Three controversial issues were considered at the 2024 International Botanical Congress, two of which focused on addressing ethical issues that arise from historical nomenclature and one of which aimed at future-proofing the type method to ensure that biological nomenclature is able to continue to accurately document and name the Earth’s biodiversity.

In the end, modest decisions were taken with respect to the first issue, which addressed eponymy — the common practice of naming taxa in honour of significant individuals. Eponyms capture and permanently record noteworthy — and sometimes troubling — aspects of the history and social context of the science of taxonomy. A set of proposals3 considered by the Madrid meeting provided a mechanism by which problematic eponyms, such as those that honour traders of enslaved persons or colonial administrators who were responsible for genocidal policies and acts, could be retired and replaced by more appropriate and acceptable names. When first published in 2021, these proposals sparked controversy: some argued that they would throw nomenclature into disarray by opening a floodgate of re-namings. By the opening of the Madrid meeting, the proposals had polarized the community. By the end of the meeting, a decision had been reached (the required 60% supermajority had been achieved) to amend the Code to allow the rejection of names that are derogatory to a group or groups of people, but only for names published after 1 January 2026. Although this decision recognizes that derogatory names are unacceptable, the meeting attendees demurred from establishing a way to deal with historical derogatory names. A special committee was established to report to the next meeting (in Cape Town, South Africa, in 2029) on how best to deal with matters of ethics in botanical nomenclature. The committee, once established, has an important but challenging remit — to find an appropriate way forward in a contested space.

修订植物命名法进展缓慢
物种名称的准确性和清晰度是通过全球商定的规则(即各种国际命名法)来实现的。国际植物学大会每六年举行一次,最近一次将于 2024 年 7 月中旬在马德里举行(参考文献 2),在为期一周的会外会议上,对这些规则1 的拟议修正案进行辩论。与会代表接受的修正案将纳入 2025 年出版的下一部《国际藻类、真菌和植物命名法规范》(以下简称《规范》)。2024 年国际植物学大会审议了三个有争议的问题,其中两个问题的重点是解决历史命名所产生的伦理问题,另一个问题的目的是使类型方法面向未来,以确保生物命名法能够继续准确地记录和命名地球上的生物多样性。最后,就第一个问题做出了适度的决定,该问题涉及同名异名--为纪念重要人物而命名类群的常见做法。同名地名捕捉并永久记录了分类科学的历史和社会背景中值得注意的方面,有时甚至是令人不安的方面。马德里会议审议的一套提案3 提供了一种机制,通过这种机制,有问题的外来地名,如纪念被奴役者的商人或对种族灭绝政策和行为负有责任的殖民管理者的地名,可以退役,代之以更合适和可接受的名称。这些建议在 2021 年首次公布时引发了争议:一些人认为,这些建议将打开重新命名的闸门,使命名法陷入混乱。到马德里会议开幕时,这些建议已经使社区两极分化。会议结束时,达成了一项决定(达到了所需的 60% 的超级多数),即修改《规范》,允许拒绝对一个或多个群体有贬义的名称,但仅限于 2026 年 1 月 1 日之后公布的名称。尽管这一决定承认贬损性地名是不可接受的,但与会者对制定处理历史上贬损性地名的方法持反对意见。会议成立了一个特别委员会,负责向下一届会议(2029 年,南非开普敦)报告如何以最佳方式处理植物命名中的伦理问题。该委员会成立后,将承担一项重要但具有挑战性的任务--在一个有争议的领域找到适当的前进方向。
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来源期刊
Nature ecology & evolution
Nature ecology & evolution Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
22.20
自引率
2.40%
发文量
282
期刊介绍: Nature Ecology & Evolution is interested in the full spectrum of ecological and evolutionary biology, encompassing approaches at the molecular, organismal, population, community and ecosystem levels, as well as relevant parts of the social sciences. Nature Ecology & Evolution provides a place where all researchers and policymakers interested in all aspects of life's diversity can come together to learn about the most accomplished and significant advances in the field and to discuss topical issues. An online-only monthly journal, our broad scope ensures that the research published reaches the widest possible audience of scientists.
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