Posted by:
johnscanlon
at Wed Apr 14 23:57:50 2004 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by johnscanlon ]
Well yes, but natural objects that are likely to come up in conversation (e.g. species, or clades with distinctive apomorphies) might as well have names, otherwise communication becomes a bit laboured. That's why we have taxonomy at all.
To qualify my point about giving up higher ranks, that's not necessary in this case because one could use the widely accepted rank of subgenus for Pseudacris. But what you usually see when people use subgenera is that they feel compelled (under the Linnean straitjacket) to assign every member of the 'split' genus to one subgenus or another, which usually creates at least one more paraphyletic (i.e. imaginary) group. Same with 'species groups'; how often do you see people defining a bunch of monotypic 'species groups' in a large genus? Even at this informal level of classification, the Linnean habit makes people do strange and pointless things, and then medieval-minded pedants have something else to argue about when they've settled the angels-on-pins question (or applied radical epistemic doubt to questions of their own and each others' eye colour). If we stick to naming groups that have some evidence for monophyly, there's no need for redundant ranks and we can get back to discussing biology and evolution. ----- John D. Scanlon Riversleigh Fossil Centre Outback at Isa Mount Isa, Queensland, Australia
[ Reply To This Message ] [ Subscribe to this Thread ] [ Hide Replies ]
|