Apart from the fact that I can barely bring myself to care about plants ;) I suspect that the vast majority of names do not present these problems. Why do we let edge cases determine what we do?

Regards

Rod

On 14 Mar 2012, at 19:10, Dmitry Mozzherin wrote:

To add to Gregor's post

scientificNameAuthorship common usage assumes that a name is a linear
construct which is true for many cases. However in general scientific
name is a tree, and it is most obvious with names of hybrids. So when
people try to apply solutions like splitting name to canonical form
and authorship, it won't work for everybody and everything

Dima

On Wed, Mar 14, 2012 at 2:58 PM, Gregor Hagedorn <g.m.hagedorn@gmail.com> wrote:
- When providers had a text blob for the name, separate from the text blob
for the authorship, they could concatenate the two for presentation in
scientificName, and also provide the authorship bit in
scientificNameAuthorship, and the consumers could easily strip the
authorship from scientificName to produce the functional equivalent of a
canonical name.


this does not work for autonyms in botany, i.e. the infraspecific taxa where
the infraspecific epithet and the specific epithet are the same. Here the
author is before the infraspecific epithet. Inconvenient, but prevents the
simplest solution.

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Roderic Page
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