Abstract

A taxon is aphyletic when it is deemed to be non-monophyletic or unresolved, therefore aphyletic taxa are a taxonomic problem rather than an evolutionary anomaly. A problem arises in systematics when taxonomic names assigned to aphyletic taxa are treated as if they were natural groups. In the absence of a taxonomic and systematic revision, anomalous taxa should be labelled as aphyletic without recourse to phylogenetic inference (i.e., interpretation). Doing so avoids the validation of aphyletic names and the creation of dubious results in fields that rely on systematic and taxonomic data.

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