Priority (botany)

Priority (botany)

Priority is a fundamental principal of modern botanical nomenclature. Essentially, it is the principle of recognising the first valid application of a name to a plant. There are two aspects to this:
# The first valid name given to a plant shall be accepted as the plant's name.
# Once a name has been used, no subsequent publication of that name shall be valid.In both cases there are formal provisions for making exceptions to this principal. If an archaic or obscure prior name is discovered for an established taxon, the current name can be declared a "nomen conservandum", and so conserved against the prior name. Similarly, if the current name for a taxon is found to have an archaic or obscure prior homonym, the current name can be declared a "nomen protectum".

The principal of priority has not always been in place. When Carl Linnaeus laid the foundations of modern botanical nomenclature, he offered no recognition of prior names. The botanists who followed him were just as willing to overturn Linnaeus's names. The first sign of recognition of priority came in 1813, when A. P. de Candolle laid out some principles of good nomenclatural practice. He favoured retaining prior names, but let wide scope for overturning poor prior names. During the 19th century, the principle gradually came to be accepted by almost all botanists, but debate continued to rage over the conditions under which the principle might be ignored. Botanists on one side of the debate argued that priority should be universal and without exception. This would have meant a one-off major disruption as countless names in current usage were overturned in favour of archaic prior names. In 1891, Otto Kuntze, one of the most vocal proponents of this position, did just that, publishing over 30000 new combinations in his "Revisio Generum Plantarum". He then followed with further such publications in 1893, 1898 and 1903. His efforts, however, were so disruptive of the nomenclature that they appear to have benefited his opponents. By the 1900s, the need for a mechanism for the conservation of names was widely accepted, and details of such a mechanism were under discussion. The current system of "modified priority" was essentially put in place at the Cambridge Congress of 1930.

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