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Saturday, July 19, 2008

Tautonymy

Tautonymy in nomenclature refers to the genus name and species epithet being the same.

Examples

  • Natrix natrix
  • Polyporus polyporus

The first, a
snake, is ruled by the nomenclature code for animals, where this is allowed. The second, a hypothetical fungus, is ruled by the code for plants, where tautonymy is not allowed. If one transfers a species to another genus and this move creates a tautonym, one must find the next priorable name, or propose a new name. This is an example of binomial nomenclature not being stable.

It is allowed for the genus and species of a plant to mean the same, without being identical. For instance, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi is bearberry, in Greek and Latin respectively. There also are a few instances of modification of the genus name in the species, such as the fern Polypodium polypodioides, which means "a polypodium that is like a polypodium".

See also binomial nomenclature



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