A Rose is a Rose, Except When it’s Called Something Else
Scientists love to name species – often more than once
Rose Eveleth • October 7, 2010
What’s in a name? Well, not much, but what really matters is that we all know what the name is. So I’m always Rose, Madonna is always Madonna and you’re always… well, whoever you are. Unfortunately, in science, names aren’t always a given. Thousands of species are known by several scientific names.
A recent story in New Scientist points to the lemon-scented basil plant as an example of what can go wrong when species names aren’t standardized. The plant has been named five different times. Researchers who think they’re working with two different plants, are unaware of a good portion of the research being done on their species.
This problem is extremely common, and combating it requires a lot of detective work. Scientists recently whittled down a list of over a million flowering plants and found 480,000 cases of duplicate names.
This naming project is a collaboration between Kew Gardens in London and Missouri Botanical Gardens in the United States. They plan to release “The Plant List,” later this year.
Of course, plants are not the only ones who are masters of multiple monikers. My favorite example of duplicate names is the Breadcrumb Sponge, which not only has been named 56 different times (check out the “AKA” section), but whenever it pops up it is always described as smelling like “exploded gunpowder.” When a sponge with such a distinguishing feature can be classified multiple times, no species is safe. Well, maybe Madonna is.
1 Comment
Wow. Not too surprising that species have multiple names but a list 480,000 duplicate names! Phew.