Difference between revisions of "Annotating Publications"
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* If a key, catalog, revision, etc. is limited in scope by geographic region, sex of specimens, or any other faction, include the qualified terms in the annotation text. | * If a key, catalog, revision, etc. is limited in scope by geographic region, sex of specimens, or any other faction, include the qualified terms in the annotation text. | ||
** Common qualified annotations are: ''key to the Nearctic species for males'', ''catalog of New World genera'', etc. | ** Common qualified annotations are: ''key to the Nearctic species for males'', ''catalog of New World genera'', etc. | ||
+ | |||
== Annotation Text Reference == | == Annotation Text Reference == | ||
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| | | | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | |species-group taxon is transferred to another genus |
+ | |''generic transfer'' | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |taxon is redescribed | ||
+ | |''description'' | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |taxon is diagnosed | ||
+ | |''diagnosis'' | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |taxon is senior synonym of taxon (new synonyms only) | ||
|''synonymy'' | |''synonymy'' | ||
| | | | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | |taxon is junior synonym of taxon (new synonyms only) |
− | |''junior synonym of { | + | |''junior synonym of {valid taxon}'' |
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |key is provided for subordinate taxa | ||
+ | |''key to {group}'' | ||
+ | |Examples: ''key to species'', ''key to tribes of Madagascar'', etc. | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |taxon is keyed | ||
+ | |''keyed'' | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |primary type of a species-group taxon is identified | ||
+ | |''type information'' | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |primary type of a species-group taxon is lost | ||
+ | |''type lost'' | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |primary type of a species-group taxon is destroyed | ||
+ | |''type destroyed'' | ||
| | | | ||
|} | |} | ||
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;junior synonym | ;junior synonym | ||
: A taxon that is treated to be the same as another taxon in which the later taxon is older and considered to be the valid name. | : A taxon that is treated to be the same as another taxon in which the later taxon is older and considered to be the valid name. | ||
+ | ;primary type | ||
+ | : The name-bearing type for a species-group taxon, which includes holotype, lectotype, neotype, and syntype. |
Revision as of 20:50, 22 March 2011
Introduction
This section contains procedures and conventions used for annotating taxonomic acts within publications.
General Notes
- All annotation text must be in lowercase except for proper nouns, taxonomic names, and after certain special cases where periods are used (i.e. original descriptions of genera). The first letter of an annotation is not capitalized.
- When a taxon name is misspelled, include only the taxonomic acts that use the misspelled name and include misspelling in the annotation text
- The pages for an annotation are always listed from first (lowest) page to last (highest) page.
- Rank the individual acts within the annotation text according to level of importance
- original description > generic transfer > description > diagnosis > synonymy or jr. synonym > key to {group} > keyed > type information or lectotype designation > ...
- The page number used for an annotation is the first page on which a taxonomic act appears.
- An original description begins with the header containing the newly described name of a descriptive block.
- For keys, every page on which a taxon is keyed is listed in the pages for an annotation.
- If a key, catalog, revision, etc. is limited in scope by geographic region, sex of specimens, or any other faction, include the qualified terms in the annotation text.
- Common qualified annotations are: key to the Nearctic species for males, catalog of New World genera, etc.
Annotation Text Reference
Taxonomic Act | Annotation Text | Comments |
---|---|---|
original description of a species-group taxon | original description | |
original description of a genus-group taxon | original description. Type: {type species w/ author}, by monotypy and/or original designation or designated by {author} ({year}) | Examples: original description. Type: Embioctonus setiger Masner, by monotypy and original designation; original description. Type: Anteris bilineata Thomson, designated by Muesebeck & Walkley (1956) |
original description of a family-group taxon | original description | |
species-group taxon is transferred to another genus | generic transfer | |
taxon is redescribed | description | |
taxon is diagnosed | diagnosis | |
taxon is senior synonym of taxon (new synonyms only) | synonymy | |
taxon is junior synonym of taxon (new synonyms only) | junior synonym of {valid taxon} | |
key is provided for subordinate taxa | key to {group} | Examples: key to species, key to tribes of Madagascar, etc. |
taxon is keyed | keyed | |
primary type of a species-group taxon is identified | type information | |
primary type of a species-group taxon is lost | type lost | |
primary type of a species-group taxon is destroyed | type destroyed |
Taxonomic Act Glossary
- description
- The act of describing the morphological or other salient characters of a taxon.
- diagnosis
- The act of defining characters that distinguishes a taxon from another taxon.
- junior synonym
- A taxon that is treated to be the same as another taxon in which the later taxon is older and considered to be the valid name.
- primary type
- The name-bearing type for a species-group taxon, which includes holotype, lectotype, neotype, and syntype.