It seems to me there are at least two issues: 

(1) what to do with unranked (or awkwardly ranked), informally named, taxonomic 
groups and 
(2) whether to put a 'value' into the epithet field -- when the specimen is not 
identified to the species level.


With regard to the second issue - I'd recommend leaving that field empty 
(NULL)... in both of your examples, the specimen has not been associated with 
an available species name.   Using 'sp' only confuses things because 'sp' is 
not an epithet.  Is there any information content difference between "Terellia 
(virens group)" and "Terellia sp. (virens group)".   "n.sp" similarly is not an 
epithet -- although it has 'some' information -- this is something that could 
be put in a field not associated with nomenclature, but with notes about the 
specimens (.e.g, that someone thinks it's an undescribed speces).

With regard to the first issue, I'm not sure how an informal rank would best be 
dealt with.  The species groups you mentioned are in some regards 
"superspecies" and perhaps Article 6.2 of the ICZN is applicable (see below).  
But I'm pretty certain that superspecies aren't a darwincore rank...or how 
they'd be dealt with.

-Chris

6.2. Names of aggregates of species or subspecies. A specific name may be added 
in parentheses after the genus-group name, or be interpolated in parentheses 
between the genus-group name and the specific name, to denote an aggregate of 
species within a genus-group taxon; and a subspecific name may be interpolated 
in parentheses between the specific and subspecific names to denote an 
aggregate of subspecies within a species; such names, which must always begin 
with a lower-case letter and be written in full, are not counted in the number 
of words in a binomen or trinomen. The Principle of Priority applies to such 
names [Art. 23.3.3]; for their availability see Article 11.9.3.5.

Recommendation 6B. Taxonomic meaning of interpolated names. An author who 
wishes to denote an aggregate at either of the additional taxonomic levels 
mentioned in Article 6.2 should place a term to indicate the taxonomic meaning 
of the aggregate in the same parentheses as its interpolated species-group name 
on the first occasion that the notation is used in any work.

Example. In the butterfly genus Ornithoptera Boisduval, 1832 the species O. 
priamus (Linnaeus, 1758) is the earliest-named member of an aggregate of 
vicarious species that includes also O. lydius Felder, 1865 and O. croesus 
Wallace, 1865. The taxonomic meaning accorded to the O. priamus aggregate may 
be expressed in the notation "Ornithoptera (superspecies priamus)", and the 
members of the aggregate by the notations "O. (priamus) priamus (Linnaeus, 
1758)", "O. (priamus) lydius Felder, 1865", and "O. (priamus) croesus Wallace, 
1865".

On Mar 27, 2012, at 12:58 AM, Peter Oboyski wrote:

> Hi all,
> 
> Forgive me if this has been discussed already. I am trying to decide how to 
> deal with species groups in our database. Here are some real life examples.
> 
> Eg. Terellia sp. (virens group)
> 
> option 1:
> Genus: Terellia
> SpecificEpithet: virens
> TaxonCertainty: species group
> 
> option 2:
> Genus: Terellia
> SpecificEpithet: sp. (virens group)
> 
> Eg. Oecetis new sp.? inconspicua group 
> 
> option 1:
> Genus: Oecetis
> SpecificEpithet: new sp.
> TaxonCertainty: "?"
> how do I incorporate the group?
> 
> option 2:
> Genus: Oecetis
> SpecificEpithet: n.sp. (inconspicua group)
> TaxonCertainty: "?"
> 
> ---------------------------------------------------
> Peter T Oboyski
> University of California
> http://nature.berkeley.edu/~poboyski/
> ---------------------------------------------------
> 
> _______________________________________________
> tdwg mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.tdwg.org/mailman/listinfo/tdwg

Christopher Marshall
Curator & Collections Manager
Oregon State Arthropod Collection
Zoology - Oregon State University
Corvallis OR, 97331-2914
[email protected]





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