Poor taxonomic sampling undermines nomenclatural stability: A reply to Roxo et al. (2019)

Author:

REIS ROBERTO E.,BRITSKI HERALDO A.,BRITTO MARCELO R.,BUCKUP PAULO A.,CALEGARI BÁRBARA B.,CAMELIER PRISCILA,DELAPIEVE MARIA LAURA S.,LANGEANI FRANCISCO,LEHMANN PABLO A.,LUCINDA PAULO H. F.,MARINHO MANOELA,MARTINS FERNANDA O.,MENEZES NAÉRCIO A.,MOREIRA CRISTIANO R.,DE PINNA MÁRIO C. C.,PAVANELLI CARLA S.,PY-DANIEL LUCIA H. RAPP,SOUSA LEANDRO M.

Abstract

A recent study based on genomic data by Roxo et al. (2019) provided a phylogeny of the Loricariidae, the largest catfish family and second largest Neotropical fish family with approximately 1,000 species. The study represents a valuable and innovative contribution for understanding higher-level relationships within the family. The phylogenetic tree inferred by Roxo et al. (2019) thoroughly corroborates the monophyly and relationships of most currently accepted subfamilies of Loricariidae, based on a fair taxon sampling (nearly 14% of the species in the family) representing most genera of each but one of the subfamilies, the Lithogeninae, the sister-group of the remaining members of the family (Pereira & Reis, 2017; Reis et al., 2017). In addition to a hypothesis of relationships, Roxo et al. (2019) also proposed a series of lower-level taxonomic changes, which are deemed premature considering that the taxonomic sampling of the study targeted higher-level clades, and go against one of the pillars of biological classification: nomenclatural stability (e.g., Heterick & Majer, 2018; Beninger & Backeljau, 2019). Here we (1) discuss implications of inadequate taxonomic sampling as a basis for changes in classification of species; (2) explain why the taxonomic sampling design of Roxo et al. (2019) is inadequate for the proposed nomenclatural changes; and (3) advocate that changes to classifications must be grounded on phylogenies with dense sampling of taxa at the relevant level. 

Publisher

Magnolia Press

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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