P 82 - Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 51(1) March 1994
OPINION 1762
Cynolebias opalescens Myers, 1942 and C. splendens Myers, 1942
(Osteichthyes, Cyprinodontiformes): specific names conserved
Ruling
(1) Under the plenary powers the following specific names are hereby suppressed
for the purposes of the Principle of Priority but not for those of the Principle of
Homonymy:
(a) fluminensis Faria & Muller, 1937, as published in the binomen Cynopoecilus
fluminensis;
(b) sandrii Faria & Muller, 1937, as published in the binomen Cynopoecilus (recte
Cynopoecilus) sandrii.
(2) The following names are hereby placed on the Official List of Specific Names
in Zoology:
(a) opalescens Myers, 1942, as published in the binomen Cynolebias opalescens;
b) splendens Myers, 1942, as published in the binomen Cynolebias splendens.
(3) The following names are hereby placed on the Official Index of Rejected and
Invalid Specific Names in Zoology:
(a) fluminensis Faria & Muller, 1937, as published in the binomen Cynopoecilus
fluminensis and as suppressed in {l)(a) above;
(b) sandrii Faria & Muller, 1937, as published in the binomen Cynopoecilus (recte
Cynopoecilus) sandrii and as suppressed in (l)(b) above.
History of Case 2792
An application for the conservation of the specific names of
Cynolebias opalescens
and C.
splendens, both of Myers (1942), was received from Drs Carl J. Ferraris and
Kenneth J. Lazara (American Museum of Natural History, New York. N Y., U.S.A.)
on 4 October 1990. After correspondence the case was published in BZN 49: 207-208
(September 1992). Notice of the case was sent to appropriate journals.
Further information on the history of the publications by Faria & Muller (1937)
and Myers (1942) was published in BZN 49: 233 (September 1992).
It was noted on the voting paper that the species were included under the names
Cynolebias opalescens and
C. splendens in recent publications (1991, p. 39; 1992,
p. 20) issued by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) (para. 3 of the application).
CITES. 1991. List of CITES Appendix Amendment Proposals. Traffic Bulletin,
12(3): 38-40.
CITES. 1992.
Amendment Proposals — Results. Traffic Bulletin, 13(1): 19-22.
Decision of the Commission
On 1 September 1993 the members of the Commission were invited to vote on the
proposals published in BZN 49: 208. At the close of the voting period on 1 December
1993 the votes were as follows:
Affirmative votes — 21: Bayer, Bock, Cocks, Cogger, Corliss, Dupuis, Hahn,
Halvorsen, Heppell, Kabata, Kraus, Macpherson, Mahnert, Minelli, Nielsen,
Savage, Schuster, Starobogatov, Stys, Trjapitzin, Willink
Negative votes — 5: Holthuis, Lehtinen, Martins de Souza, Nye and Thompson.
Bouchet abstained.
No vote was received from Ueno.
Ride was on leave of absence.
Bouchet commented:
"I am prepared to reject Faria & Muller's (1937) paper on the
grounds that Revista Naval was not published for the purpose of providing a
permanent scientific record but I am not prepared to reject the names fluminensis and
sandrii 'only on the question of whether the widespread adoption of a junior synonym
outside of the systematic community is sufficient to justify its continued use' (BZN
49: 233, para. 1) Listing by CITES is not sufficient to demonstrate that there is
widespread adoption of Myers's names'.
Dupuis commented that he voted in favour
solely because Myers's (1942) names were included in CITES publications.
Holthuis
commented that since all the names were relatively recently published priority should
prevail.
Kabata said that he voted for the case with reluctance.
Lehtinen commented:
'The listing of names in a Red Data Book or similar publication is an important
additional consideration in problematic cases but the suppression of names which are
some years older cannot be accepted mainly on this basis'.
Thompson commented:
'When workers correctly and properly follow the principles and Code of nomenclature
and use the senior names for species which were only recently discovered,
some specialists ignore their actions, waiting a few years until the junior names have
existed for 50 years so as to apply for their conservation. Such actions are unethical
and contrary to the principles of science and should not be endorsed'.
(Editorial note.)
Drs Ferraris & Lazara did not wait until 50 years after the publication of Myers
(1942). They submitted their application in October 1990 and wrote (May 1992) that
they would have supported the resurrection of the names of Faria & Muller (1937)
were it not for the widespread adoption of Myers's names by government and
conservation organisations).
Original references
The following are the original references to the names placed on an Official List and an
Official Index by the ruling given in the present Opinion:
fluminensis, Cynopoecilus, Faria & Muller, 1937, Revista Naval, 37(3): 99.
opalescens, Cynolebias, Myers, 1942, Stanford Ichthyological Bulletin, 2(4): 107.
sandrii, Gynopoecilus (recte
Cynopoecilus), Faria & Muller. 1937, Revista Naval, 37(3); 98.
splendens, Cynolebias, Myers, 1942, Stanford Ichthyological Bulletin, 2(4): 110.