Hylopetes magistri, new name for Hylopetes debruijni Reumer & Van den Hoek Ostende, 2003, preoccupied
Publication date
2011
Authors
Hoek Ostende, L.W. van den
Reumer, J.W.F.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
In 2003, we published a new species of Hylopetes, H. debruijni,
from the early Pleistocene locality of Tegelen, The Netherlands
(Reumer and Van den Hoek Ostende, 2003). This publication
appeared in a special volume in honor of Hans de Bruijn, which
contained the proceedings of congress in Utrecht (17–19 May
2001) on the occasion of the 70th birthday of our esteemed
colleague. While still in press, our publication was overtaken
by a paper by Mein and Ginsburg (2002), who, unaware of our
manuscript, also named a species of Hylopetes in honor of Hans
de Bruijn. The type locality of H. debruijni Mein & Ginsburg,
2002, is the middle Miocene fissure filling La Grive M in France.
The French material clearly represents a different species than
the Dutch finds. Therefore, we conclude that, unfortunately, we
published a name that was already preoccupied.
Daxner-H¨ ock (2004) tentatively assigned the Dutch species to
her new genus Neopetes, creating the new combination N. debruijni
(Reumer and Van den Hoek Ostende, 2003). This, however,
is of no consequence to the homonomy of the two species,
as the ICZN specifically defines a primary homonym as identical
species-group names for different taxa originally combined
with the same generic name. As a primary homonym, H. debruijni
Reumer & Van den Hoek Ostende, 2003, is permanently invalid
(ICZN 1999:art 57.2). Therefore, we propose Hylopetes magistri
new name for Hylopetes debruijni Reumer & Van den Hoek Ostende,
2003, preoccupied by Hylopetes debruijni Mein & Ginsburg,
2002. We consider assignation of the species magistri to the
genus Neopetesas proposed by Daxner-H¨ ock (2004) premature,
as this would first require direct comparison of the Dutch material
to the type species of that genus. The specific name (magistri
*Corresponding author.
from Latin = of the master) mirrors our original intent to name
the species after Hans de Bruijn, and stresses that the maestro
has been instrumental in shaping the career of many palaeontologists,
both in The Netherlands and abroad