Dictionary Definition
holotype n : the original specimen from which the
description of a new species is made [syn: type
specimen]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The single physical example (or illustration) of an organism, known to be used when the taxon was formally described.
Extensive Definition
A holotype is one of several possible biological
types. A type is what fixes a name to a taxon. A holotype is a
single physical example (or illustration) of an organism, known to
be used when the species
(or lower-ranked taxon)
was formally described. It is either the single such physical
example (or illustration) or one of several such, but explicitly
designated as the holotype.
For example, the holotype for the butterfly Lycaeides
idas longinus is held by the Museum of Comparative Zoology at
Harvard
University, and the holotype for the extinct mammal Cimolodon is at
the University
of Alberta.
A holotype is not necessarily 'typical' of that
taxon, although ideally it should be. Sometimes just a fragment of
an organism is the holotype, for example in the case of a rare
fossil. The holotype of
Pelorosaurus humerocristatus, a large herbivore dinosaur from the early
Jurassic
period, is a fossil leg bone stored at the Natural
History Museum in London. Even under
unusual circumstances a good quality photograph can be submitted as
holotype. Even if a better specimen is subsequently found, the
holotype is not superseded.
In the absence of a holotype (e.g. it was lost)
another type may be selected, out of a range of different kinds of
type, depending on the case. Note that in the ICBN and ICZN the definitions
of types are similar in intent but not identical in terminology or
underlying concept.
For example in both the ICBN and the ICZN a
"neotype" is a type that
was later appointed in the absence of the original holotype.
Additionally, under the ICZN the Commission is empowered to replace
a holotype with a "neotype", when the holotype turns out to lack
important diagnostic features needed to distinguish the species
from its close relatives. For example, the crocodile-like archosaurian reptile
Parasuchus hislopi Lydekker,
1885 was described based on a premaxillary rostrum (part of the snout), but
this is no longer sufficient to distinguish Parasuchus from its
close relatives. This made the name Parasuchus hislopi a nomen
dubium. Texan paleontologist Sankar
Chatterjee proposed that a new type specimen, a complete
skeleton, be designated. The
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature considered
the case and agreed to replace the original type specimen with the
proposed neotype..
The procedures for the designation of a new type
specimen when the original is lost come into play for some recent,
high-profile species descriptions in which the specimen designated
as the holotype was a living individual that was allowed to remain
in the wild (e.g.,). In such a case, there is no actual type
specimen available for study, and the possibility exists that -
should there be any perceived ambiguity in the identity of the
species - subsequent authors can invoke various clauses in the
ICZN Code that allow for the designation of a neotype.
Remarkably, the Code explicitly states that the designation of a
neotype must be based upon an actual physical specimen that is "the
property of a recognized scientific or educational institution",
but there is no such requirement for a holotype.
Under the ICBN, also, a replacement type could be
appointed by such a procedure, but this would be called a
"conserved type". However, a conserved type would not be appointed
in the case of a type that is insufficiently clear: in that case an
additional and clarifying type could be designated, a so-called
"epitype". Great care must be used in speaking of types, as
definitions are very precise.
See also
- biological type
- paratype (zoology)
- allotype
References
holotype in Catalan: Holotip
holotype in Dutch: Holotype
holotype in Polish: Holotyp
holotype in Ukrainian: Голотип