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Fungal nomenclature 3. A critical response to the 'Amsterdam Declaration'

Authors :
Walter Gams
Walter M. Jaklitsch
Source :
Mycotaxon. 116:501-512
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Mycotaxon, Ltd., 2011.

Abstract

Numerous taxonomists and monographers of fungi are objecting an enforced unitary nomenclature for ascomycetes and basidiomycetes. Proposals 297 and subsequent ones by Redhead et al. (2010) and the "Amsterdam Declaration" (AD) demand more or less drastic and not necessarily efficient changes into this direction. Three groups of arguments in the AD are refuted: 1. The identification of organisms exclusively based on gene sequences is prone to errors and only a minority of the named fungi has been thoroughly studied so far with molecular methods. 2. There is no need for a mycological Code separate from the botanical one. Where taxonomy demands, special rules for Fungi have already been defined. The registration of taxonomic novelties required for valid publication is supported, but without MycoBank being entitled to make taxonomic statements. 3. Deletion of Article 59 is not possible without chaotic consequences. The mechanism of teleotypification alone does not lead to phylogenetically supported genera. Even after introducing a 'one fungus - one name' rule, mycologists will need to understand the so far prevailing system of dual nomenclature when screening the taxonomic literature.

Details

ISSN :
21548889 and 00934666
Volume :
116
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mycotaxon
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dcf1f97a7f040ba13dc8d7d9be0fc742
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5248/116.501