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Author (biology)



         


In biology, the Author of the scientific name of a taxon is the person or team who first makes the name available by using it in a scientific publication with a description of the taxon to which it applies.

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Zoology

The International Code of Zoological Nomenclature recognises three groups of taxa for which names can be authored:

Within each group, the same authorship applies regardless of the taxon level to which the name (with, in the case of the Family Group, the appropriate variable ending) is applied. In strict taxonomical works the author and the date of publication will be appended to the taxon name to ensure clarity of the sense in which a taxon name is being used.

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Example

(Red admiral butterfly):

The use of brackets around the authorship of a species name indicates that the author made the specific name available but considered it part of a different genus (in this case, Linnaeus classified it as Papilio atalanta).

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Botany

The International Code of Botanical Nomenclature does not use level groups. Names at every level can have distinct authorship. This extends up to class (or even to division), and down to variety, form and subform.

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Example

(Damask rose):





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