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Thank you.
Yes in this case but not always - they may be biologically distinct (example ). They may also be without the known or originally described range.pleco_breeder wrote:This is where it becomes a grey area for me. Since both L's have been recognized as this species, wouldn't collection locality, within the range of the species, deem them all to be the same?
Yes. But that's not what happened here. The l-numbers were created, from a few collected fish, and once they were looked at in detail it was found that they were already a described species. The l-number persists as, as has happened here, folks aren't too sure what they really mean (oh, and L083 is commercially sexier and easier to spell than Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps).pleco_breeder wrote:It only makes sense to me if there is a biological difference enough to segregate them, wouldn't that same difference also segregate them from the species?
The number is retired, it doesn't "stay". Unless, of course, in the future someone revises the species and find out all the population in the Tefe is something else. However, as you're about to say, it is perpetuated incorrectly and, in many cases, for commercial gain.pleco_breeder wrote:In this case, since the number stays because of collection locality, what is the difference which separates it from its own species?
Are you really saying tens of thousands of P. gibbiceps are exported from S America? The name is not correct if the fish didn't originate from the locality but it's still a retired l-number...pleco_breeder wrote:I know from conversation the number L083 has been applied to tens of thousands of fish labeled "marble sailfin pleco" prior to reaching the wholesale level and shipped all over the world. Therefore, there has to be some way of differentiating the population from the species. Otherwise, which name is applied no longer becomes relevant because the population is mixed.
pleco_breeder wrote:With that being the case, I suggest we place both the nomenclature and number in synonymy and go with the more popular "big spotted suckyfish". Of course this can't be confused with the "big-spotted suckyfish" or else we're back at square one.
One farm in the US that I'm aware of sales pond raised stock of these globally via a jobber. I used to have a working relationship with the individual, via their wholesale entity, and obviously discussed plecos in depth quite often. Anyway, it was his common practice to place an L number on any fish if one was available that matched the fish. I didn't, and still don't, condone the practice, but I'm sure it is still happening. Likewise, I probably bought hundreds of L129/Hypancistrus furunculus just because he had marketed them under the name mega clown pleco waiting on a real one. Of course this was long before the fish actually became available and was still on a holy grail list of fish to have.Jools wrote: Are you really saying tens of thousands of P. gibbiceps are exported from S America? The name is not correct if the fish didn't originate from the locality but it's still a retired l-number...
2wheelsx2 wrote:I know this is getting nitpicky into the semantics, but if the L number is only for the fish collected in a locality, then what happens to the F1? Say you bred L24, you should not technically be selling them as L24 F1 since there's no such thing. You'd have to say unclassified Pseudacanthicus species bred from wild caught L24, wouldn't you? Seems like a vicious circle to me.
Really interesting points Larry. I agree it isn't always clear cut. I think there is retiring L numbers, and retiring L numbers, and they're not necessarily the same process.pleco_breeder wrote: I completely agree with no longer using described numbers since the species description is always going to be more in depth than a picture in a magazine with the subtitle "new from Brazil". However, my point is if the number really is descriptive of a race or locality enough to differentiate it from the species it is thought to belong to, is it really retired. In the case of P. gibbiceps, I personally believe it's just a synonymous common name used strictly for commercial gain because numbers seem to directly correlate with money. I'm simply hoping someone can explain to me the difference since my own understanding of nomenclature and the generally accepted L format would indicate L083 and P. gibbiceps are the same.
If a fish inhabits a large area, and is scientifically accepted to inhabit that area without barriers forcing evolution, and free movement to intermingle with other variants of the species, why would fish within a small section of that range be defined as anything different than the rest of the species?
That's a taxonomical statement that this is a distinct but as yet unidentified or unnamed species. If you want to express that this is a distinct population of a named species you could write Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps "L83". Perhaps even better would be Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps "Xingu", as that is more informative than the L-number.racoll wrote:I would probably use Pterygoplichthys sp. "L083" for the Xingu population/species, seeing as it's distinctive enough.
I agree, and how about Pterygoplichthys cf. gibbiceps "L083 Xingu" for information!That's a taxonomical statement that this is a distinct but as yet unidentified or unnamed species. If you want to express that this is a distinct population of a named species you could write Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps "L83". Perhaps even better would be Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps "Xingu", as that is more informative than the L-number.
In my opinion it's never wrong to use the most specific alternative, especially if you suspect that gibbiceps from capture locality X are not the same species as gibbiceps from capture locality Y.
Shane wrote:I can sell the fish I breed at one of my local clubs by their proper scientific name or I can put their L Number on the bag and get twice as much.
I don't think hobbyist's reluctance to use scientific names, or the fact that they are often seduced by creative advertising, has anything to do with the utility of an interim taxonomic system based on an iconotype-like system. The two are separate to me.Shane wrote:21 years after description and the "retired" L Number is used more often than either the scientific name or common name.
Well, it could be argued that DESCRIBED SPECIES != SPECIES ...Jools wrote: SPECIES != L-NUMBER
Taxonomy as generally conducted has a strong tendency to underestimate biodiversity (species richness). Therefore, the L number system with it's "oversplitting" may ultimately be closer to the mark (averaged out of course).pleco_breeder wrote:it appears this becomes a question of "lumpers" vs. "splitters"
This goes for all types of common names: any fish is much easier to sell under a common name than under its scientific name. I actually did a little experiment a couple of years ago at an aquarium auction, I sold some fish as "Tilapia snyderae" and some as "Rust tilapia (Tilapia snyderae)". Take a wild guess which sold and which didn't.Shane wrote:I can sell the fish I breed at one of my local clubs by their proper scientific name or I can put their L Number on the bag and get twice as much.
It's not all about money, Mike couldn't have said it better.Mike_Noren wrote: Latin names are intimidating and difficult to pronounce. Common names (which is what L-numbers really are) are not.
I agree with you that L Numbers are, at best, just common names. If one accepts this then one also accepts that L442 is a designation equal in utility to Big White Spot Rubbernose pleco and nothing more.Common names (which is what L-numbers really are) are not.