Christyf5

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Hey good question! I was thinking about that and I came up with "because, Linnaeus said so". I also was thinking that when you are talking about a particular species such as Euphyllia divisa everything is italicized but if you are talking about Euphyllia as a genus it is not. Maybe the italics are used to differentiate between the two??

We just learned that it was always italicized and accepted it as that. Nobody ever said why.

Eric??


Christy :)
 

Eric Borneman

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I am not absolutely sure on this, but I belive it is to emphasize in a taxonomical description, the name of the organism. While genus and species are also taxonomical groupings, same as family, order, etc., the actual binomial name of an organism consists of a genus and species. For example, Acropora millepora is the name, not Acroporidae Acropora millepora. btw, genus is italicized - or should be - even when talking about a group.

Here is a little bit on the subject:

"Names of organisms. Biological organisms have an official scientific name (called a latin binomial), as well as one (to several) common names. Common names vary regionally, so clear communication requires the used of scientific names. Scientific names come in two parts (thus, binomial), the first part the genus (plural, genera), the second part the species (plural, species). The genus names is always capitalized, and the species name is never capitalized (even if it is a proper noun!). The genus and species names are always italicized or underlined. Recent changes in the nomenclatural code also requires family names to be italicized, but this practice is not universally adopted (they should always be capitalized, however). Following the species name, one sometimes finds additional words. They may be a designation for a subspecies or variety (designated by a non-italicized "ssp." or "var." followed by the italicized name), or may designate the "authority", the person who gave the organism its name. The authority is never italicized, and should be given with the organism's name the first time it is used in a paper, but not thereafter. The first time that the organism is named in a paper the full genus and species must be written out; after that, the first letter of the genus name, followed by the full species name may be used. Common names should be capitalized, but never italicized. "
 

vmiller

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Thank you Eric and Christy.

This leads to my next question.

Does Acropora sp. Mean an unidentified species of Acropora?

I've also seen ssp. used after the genus name. Based on the reference you provided, this seems incorrect. Is it?
 

Christyf5

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You know, I was thinking. ALL Latin is italicized. I always see in vitro or in vivo in papers I read and its always italicized. Maybe Latin just gets to be the "special" language since its the root for so many others.

Christy :)
 

Eric Borneman

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vmiller:

it could, depending on the context and there is a cacth-22 in the word unidentified - it could mean unidendtified as in the person doesn't or hasn't examined it to species, not just that it is really truly an unidentified species. Mostly, you see that used when one is referring to mean a single species of Acropora, in general. i.e. what is that? Its an Acropora sp.
 

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