| Literature DB >> 35921033 |
Robert Poulin1, Daniela de Angeli Dutra2, Bronwen Presswell2.
Abstract
In its advice to taxonomists, the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) recommends that scientific species names should be compact, memorable, and easy to pronounce. Here, using a dataset of over 3000 species of parasitic helminths described in the past two decades, we investigate trends in the length of Latin specific names (=epithets) chosen by taxonomists. Our results reveal no significant temporal change in the length of species epithets as a function of year of description, with annual averages fluctuating around the overall average length of just over 9 letters. We also found that lengths of species epithets did not differ among the various host taxa from which the parasites were recovered, however acanthocephalan species have been given longer species epithets than other helminth taxa. Finally, although species epithets were shorter than genus names for three-quarters of the species in our dataset, we detected no relationship between the length of species epithets and that of genus names across all species included, i.e., there was no evidence that shorter species epithets are chosen to compensate for long genus names. We conclude by encouraging parasite taxonomists to follow the recommendations of the ICZN and choose species epithets that are, as much as possible, compact and easy to remember, pronounce and spell.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35921033 PMCID: PMC9548468 DOI: 10.1007/s11230-022-10058-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Parasitol ISSN: 0165-5752 Impact factor: 1.023
Average length (no. letters) of species epithets in the dataset broken down by parasite and host taxonomic groups. The number of species is given in parenthesis.
| Trematodes | Cestodes | Monogeneans | Nematodes | Acanthocephalans | TOTAL | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Invertebrates | 8.0 (1) | — (0) | — (0) | 9.8 (75) | — (0) | 9.8 (76) |
| Fish | 8.9 (484) | 8.7 (395) | 9.2 (719) | 9.8 (314) | 10.3 (93) | 9.2 (2005) |
| Amphibians | 10.0 (22) | 7.7 (3) | 9.1 (15) | 9.5 (95) | 9.5 (8) | 9.5 (143) |
| Reptiles | 9.1 (51) | 10.1 (19) | 10.3 (6) | 9.5 (157) | 9.3 (6) | 9.5 (239) |
| Birds | 9.1 (103) | 8.5 (36) | — (0) | 8.6 (40) | 9.9 (24) | 9.0 (203) |
| Mammals | 9.6 (43) | 8.8 (73) | — (0) | 9.0 (221) | 8.3 (13) | 9.0 (350) |
| TOTAL | 9.0 (704) | 8.7 (526) | 9.2 (740) | 9.4 (902) | 10.0 (144) | 9.2 (3016) |
Fig. 1Frequency distribution of the lengths of species epithets among 3016 species of helminth parasites described between 2000 and 2021 inclusively. The broken line indicates the average length.
Ten longest species epithets (based on number of letters) in our dataset
| Species name | Higher taxon | Length of species epithet | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nematode | 20 | Kuzmin et al. ( | |
| Monogenean | 19 | Soo & Tan ( | |
| Acanthocephalan | 19 | Amin et al. ( | |
| Acanthocephalan | 19 | Amin et al. ( | |
| Trematode | 19 | Corner et al. ( | |
| Monogenean | 18 | Cone et al. ( | |
| Nematode | 18 | Moravec & Justine ( | |
| Monogenean | 18 | Cruces et al. ( | |
| Trematode | 18 | Bray & Cribb ( | |
| Nematode | 18 | Moravec & Justine ( |
Results of the GLMM with length of the species epithet as the response variable, showing the effects of the main predictors. Significant effects shown in bold
| Fixed factors | Estimate | Standard error | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (intercept) | −0.030 | 2.095 | −0.014 | 0.9885 |
| Genus name length | −0.001 | 0.002 | −0.170 | 0.8647 |
| Parasite taxon (nematodes) | −0.057 | 0.030 | −1.871 | 0.0614 |
| Host taxon (birds) | −0.037 | 0.037 | −1.003 | 0.3157 |
| Host taxon (fish) | −0.090 | 0.245 | −0.369 | 0.7118 |
| Host taxon (invertebrates) | 0.030 | 0.046 | 0.648 | 0.5172 |
| Host taxon (mammals) | −0.048 | 0.033 | −1.461 | 0.1440 |
| Host taxon (reptiles) | −0.001 | 0.034 | −0.043 | 0.9659 |
| Year of publication | 0.001 | 0.001 | 1.123 | 0.2615 |
NB: acanthocephalans (parasite taxon) and amphibians (host taxon) are included in the intercept and serve as reference.
The percentage of the remaining variance accounted for by the random factor ‘Journal ID’ was <1%.
Fig. 2Annual average length of species epithets for helminth parasites described between 2000 and 2021. The broken line indicates the overall average length. The number of species on which the averages are based range from 85 (in 2002) to 178 (in 2007).
Fig. 3Bubble plot of the length of species epithets as a function of the length of genus names among 3016 species of helminth parasites described between 2000 and 2021 inclusively. The diameter of each bubble is proportional to the number of species with the corresponding genus name and species epithet length values. The solid line is the line of best fit, whereas values along the broken line represent cases where the species epithet and genus name have the exact same length.