Abstract

The List of Available Names in Zoology (LAN) is an inventory of names with specific scope in time and content, presented and approved in parts, and constituted as a cumulative index of names available for use in zoological nomenclature. It was defined in Article 79 in the fourth edition of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. The LAN is likely to gain importance with the development of the online Official Registry for Zoological Nomenclature (ZooBank) as it is potentially a source of many nomenclaturally certified names. Article 79 describes the deliberative process for adding large numbers of names to the LAN simultaneously, detailing steps and chronology for submission of a candidate Part to the LAN and consideration of a candidate Part by the public and Commission, but it is largely mute about the contents of a candidate Part. It does make clear that a name within the scope of a Part but not on the LAN has no nomenclatural standing, even if it had previously been considered available, thereby preventing long-forgotten names from displacing accepted ones and the accumulation of nomina dubia. Thus, for taxa on the LAN, nomenclatural archaeology – the resurrecting of old unused names to replace by priority names in current usage – will not be worthwhile. Beyond that, it has been unclear if Article 79 is intended to document every available name known within the scope of the Part, or if its intention is to pare the inventory of available names within the scope of the Part. Consideration by the Commission and two committees to deal with the LAN have defined steps to implement Article 79 with the latter intent. Procedures for consideration of a candidate Part are defined in a manual, published as an appendix in this volume.

Highlights

  • The fourth edition of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 1999; hereafter “the Code”) introduced the concept of a List of Available Names in Zoology (LAN) as a way to deal with the plethora of available names that has accumulated over the more than two and a half centuries of zoological nomenclature since the founding datum of the field by Linnaeus’ 10th edition of Systema Naturae (1758)

  • Scoble 2004), has taken on additional significance with the development of the online Official Registry for Zoological Nomenclature, with its online presence called ZooBank, because the LAN can potentially serve as a source of many nomenclaturally certified names

  • Facets of the procedure stipulated in Article 79 for simultaneously adding large numbers of names to the LAN include 1) who may submit a candidate Part for consideration, 2) the scope of a candidate Part, 3) what those who have proposed a Part are to do, and 4) what is to be done with the candidate Part by the Commission

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Summary

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The List of Available Names (LAN): A new generation for stable taxonomic names in zoology?. Michel | Received 25 May 2015 | Accepted 25 May 2015 | Published 7 January 2016 http://zoobank.org/7BD917A6-4797-4852-AB98-CCEFA6C7A70E

Introduction
Aspects addressed in the Code
Aspects not addressed in the Code
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