Abstract
Modern biology builds upon the historic exploration of the natural world. Recognizing the origin of a species’ name is one path to honor the historic exploration and description of the natural world and the indigenous peoples that lived closely with organisms prior to their description. While digitization of historic papers catalogued in databases such as the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) allows for searching of the first use and origin of names, the rapid pace of taxonomic publishing can occlude a thorough search for etymologies. The etymological origin of the genus nameAmeivais one such case; while unattributed in multiple recent works, it is of Tupí language origin. The first description was in theHistoriae Rerum Naturalium Brasiliaeby George Marcgrave (1648).Ameivawas the name used by Marcgrave’s Amerindian hosts in 17thcentury Dutch Brazil, where local people spoke the now extinct language Tupí. The Tupí origin was not lost, however, until as recently as the 2000s. Herein, the pre- and post-Linnaean use of the nameAmeivais traced and when the name is attributed to the Tupí language and to Marcgrave through time it is noted. The opportunity to discover and/or recover etymological origins, especially names from extinct and indigenous languages, provides insight into the early Western sciences. Careful study of etymology by naturalists is consistent with the idea that science is an evolving process with many predecessors to appreciate.
Highlights
Our understanding of the relationships of species is evolving rapidly
The earliest use of the name Ameiva within the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) was found in the Latin-language Historiae Rerum Naturalium Brasiliae by George Marcgrave of the Dutch Republic (Marcgrave 1648)
Establishing that Marcgrave ran into the word Ameiva in South America, of local Amerindian origin, a problem exists in independently verifying the word by Tupí language authorities
Summary
Our understanding of the relationships of species is evolving rapidly. As a result, scientists are continually revising circumscriptions, proposing new names, and resurrecting old names. The South American tegu lizard Tupinambis teguixin Linnaeus, 1758 is a direct cognate from the extinct language Tupí. One of these suspected cognates is Ameiva (Meyer, 1795), the modern generic name of a group of more than 36 lizard species distributed throughout Central and South America and the Caribbean. The Historiae Rerum Naturalium Brasiliae (Marcgrave, 1648)
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