Chapter 12: Homonymy


Article 60. Replacement of junior homonyms.

60.1. Substitute names. A junior homonym [Art. 53] must be rejected and replaced either by an available and potentially valid synonym [Art. 23.3.5] or, for lack of such a name, by a new substitute name [Art. 60.3]. For unused senior homonyms see Article 23.9; for the replacement of homonymous family-group names see Articles 39 and 55.3; and for the replacement of secondary homonyms in the species group see Article 59.

60.2. Junior homonyms with synonyms. If the rejected junior homonym has one or more available and potentially valid synonyms, the oldest of these becomes the valid name of the taxon [Art. 23.3.5] with its own authorship and date.

60.3. Junior homonyms without synonyms. If the rejected junior homonym has no known available and potentially valid synonym it must be replaced by a new substitute name, with its own author and date; this name will then compete for priority with any synonym recognized later.

Recommendation 60A. Desirability of objective replacement. Unless the name-bearing type of the nominal taxon denoted by the rejected junior homonym is taxonomically inadequate (e.g. as described in Article 75.5 or, in the case of a genus-group homonym, the type species is poorly defined), authors are advised to use that same type to establish a new replacement name (nomen novum) as an objective replacement [Arts. 67.8, 72.7].


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Markup
FranciscoWelterSchultes   Art. 60.3.

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The difference between a new substitute name and a new replacement name should be explained, either here or in the Glossary. A new substitute name can either be a new replacement name or a regular new name that can be used instead of the invalid name. Such a regular new name can eventually be an objective synonym, given that the author, when establishing the new name, does not indicate the intention to replace the name for nomenclatural reasons (lack of an expressed statement, so that the requirement "expressly" is not met).

2016-03-09 19:33:32

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