Global Information Lookup Global Information

Tibicen information


Latreille, 1825, front page

Tibicen is a former genus name in the insect family Cicadidae (order Hemiptera) that was originally published by P. A. Latreille in 1825[1] and formally made available in a translation by A. A. Berthold in 1827.[2] The name was placed on the Official Index of Rejected and Invalid Generic Names in Zoology by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature in 2021.[3] Certain European cicada species that were included by some authors in this genus at the time of its suppression are now listed under genus Lyristes Horváth, 1926.[4] Other formerly-Tibicen species are placed in the tribe Cryptotympanini and include the genera Auritibicen Lee, 2015, Hadoa Moulds, 2015 Megatibicen Sanborn and Heath, 2016, and Neotibicen Hill and Moulds, 2015.

For nearly a century after its 1825 appearance in the literature, Tibicen was rarely referenced.[5] Usage increased in the early 1900s when influential authors such as G. W. Kirkaldy and E. P. Van Duzee began applying the name to a group of prominent North American cicadas currently in the subfamily Cicadinae and tribe Cryptotympanini. By 2015, more than 100 cicada species and subspecies were included in genus Tibicen, from around the Northern Hemisphere.[6]

First literature reference to genus Tibicen, in Latreille, 1825, p. 426

During the 20th century, Tibicen became a source of controversy and confusion in cicada nomenclature.[7][8][9] Some argued that neither Latreille's original description nor its Berthold translation met the requirements of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. Both works listed the new genus name with no description, immediately followed by the species "c. plebeia" or "Cicada plebeia", without authorship. This indication has often been taken to refer to Cicada plebeja Scopoli, 1763[6][5] (a European species now in subfamily Cicadinae), although a different Cicada plebeja might have been intended, a Cicadinae species defined by Linnaeus in 1767. Acceptance of the argument that neither Latreille's nor Berthold's publication made the name available to nomenclature would lead to the conclusion that Tibicen was correctly founded on a later publication of the name, one also authored by Latreille (1829)[10] but based on a different Scopoli species, Cicada haematodes Scopoli, 1763 (a cicada now in subfamily Tibicininae). Disagreement over the nomenclatural validity of Tibicen Berthold, 1827 (or Latreille, 1825) versus Tibicen Latreille, 1829 meant that the genus name as well as the family group names based upon it (e.g., Tibiceninae) held different biological meanings depending on the author's opinion of the correct type species. Furthermore, since the stem of the name Tibicen differs by just one letter from that of the cicada genus Tibicina Kolenati, 1857, for which Cicada haematodes Scopoli was also assigned type status, additional confusion was created by different authors misspelling the involved generic and family group names.

In 1984, Melville and Sims petitioned the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature to alleviate the longstanding confusion within cicada taxonomy by suppressing the generic name Tibicen Berthold, 1827 for the purposes of the Principle of Priority (Case 239).[11] This change would eliminate the problem of higher level taxa with similar spellings and allow the cicadas allied with Cicada plebeja Scopoli, 1763 at the genus level to be included under an unambiguously defined junior name, Lyristes Horváth, a synonym which had been created in 1926.[12]

Lyristes plebejus (Scopoli, 1763), a European cicada regarded as the type species of the former genus Tibicen

Several decades passed before the Commission responded to the Melville and Sims petition. In 2014, several authors renewed the push to resolve the Tibicen question, albeit with differing opinions as to the validity of the original 1825/1827 definition of the name.[13] Finally, in 2021, the Commission issued Opinion 2475 which suppressed the generic name Tibicen Berthold, 1827 for the purposes of the Principle of Priority and placed it on the Official Index of Rejected and Invalid Generic Names in Zoology.[3] This decision was facilitated by the prior removal to new genera of all formerly Tibicen species from Asia and the Americas, prompted in part by new molecular genetic data.[14][15][16][17] Because related cicadas in the European species group were already included under Lyristes by many authors, suppression of the name Tibicen also conserved current usage.[18][19]

Neotibicen canicularis, the "Dog-day cicada" of North America and the type species of the genus Neotibicen. Until 2015, this species was included in genus Tibicen

As an officially rejected name, Tibicen is now an item of history. All species associated at the generic level with its type species are currently listed under genus Lyristes Horváth, 1926.[4] The family group names based on Tibicen – namely Tibicenina (subtribe), Tibicenini (tribe), Tibiceninae (subfamily), Tibicenidae (family), and Tibicenoidea (superfamily) – are also no longer available for use (Article 39, Code of Zoological Nomenclature).[20] Tibicenini, which was named by Distant (1889), previously held date priority as the oldest name for the current tribal concept that includes Cicada plebeja Scopoli. This group is now commonly referred to with the name Cryptotympanini Handlirsch, 1925,[21] although the rules of nomenclature indicate that Tacuini Distant, 1904 has priority.[22]

Echoes of the historical genus name Tibicen remain in recently erected genera that contain many of its former members – Auritibicen Lee (Asia), Megatibicen Sanborn & Heath (North America), and Neotibicen Hill & Moulds (North America), as well as in the synonymic genera Ameritibicen Lee, Gigatibicen Lee, and Paratibicen Lee.[23]

  1. ^ Latreille, P. A. (1825). Familles naturelles du règne animal, exposées succinctement et dans un ordre analytique, avec lindication de leurs genres. J. B. Baillière [etc.]
  2. ^ Berthold, A. A. (1827). Latreille Natürliche Familien des Thierreichs. Aus dem Französischen. Mit Anmerkungen und Zusätzen. Im Verlage des Gr. H.S. priv. Weimar: Landes-Industrie-Comptoirs.
  3. ^ a b "Opinion 2475 (Case 239) – Tibicina Kolenati, 1857 and Lyristes Horvath, 1926 (Insecta, Hemiptera): usage conserved by the suppression of Tibicen Berthold, 1827; Cicada Linnaeus, 1758 (Insecta, Hemiptera): usage conserved by designation of Cicada orni Linnaeus, 1758 as the type species". The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 78 (2): 138–141. August 2021. doi:10.21805/bzn.v78.a032.
  4. ^ a b "Catalogue of Life". Listing for genus Lyristes
  5. ^ a b Metcalf, Z.P. (1963). General Catalogue of the Homoptera. Fasc. 8. Cicadoidea. Part 1: Cicadidae. Raleigh, USA: University of North Carolina State College.
  6. ^ a b Sanborn, Allen F. (14 November 2013). "Catalogue of the Cicadoidea". Catalogue of the Cicadoidea (Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha). Academic Press. pp. 1–715. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-416647-9.00001-2. ISBN 978-0-12-416647-9.
  7. ^ Boulard, M. (1998). "Nomenclature et taxonomie supérieures des Cicadoidea ou vraies cigales: histoire, problèmes et solutions (Rhynchota Homoptera Cicadomorpha)". École Pratique des Hautes Études, Biologie et Évolution des Insectes. 10: 79–129.
  8. ^ Boulard, M.; Weiner, J. (2001). "Higher Taxonomy and Nomenclature of the Cicadoidea or true cicadas: history, problems and solutions" (PDF). École Pratique des Hautes Études, Biologie et Évolution des Insectes. 14: 1–48.
  9. ^ Moulds, M. S. (30 November 2005). "An appraisal of the higher classification of cicadas (Hemiptera: Cicadoidea) with special reference to the Australian fauna". Records of the Australian Museum. 57 (3): 375–446. doi:10.3853/j.0067-1975.57.2005.1447.
  10. ^ Latreille, P. A. (1829). [Hémiptères, Homoptères (Homoptera)]. In Le Règne Animal distribué d'après son organisation, pour servir de base a l'histoire naturelle des animaux et d'introduction a l'anatomie comparée, ed. G.C.L.D. Cuvier. New edition. 5. Paris: Deterville. pp. 209–224.
  11. ^ Melville, R. V.; Sims, R. W. (1984). "Tibicina Amyot, 1847 and Lyristes Horváth, 1926 (Insecta, Hemiptera, Homoptera): proposed conservation by the suppression of Tibicen Berthold, 1827. Z.N.(S.) 239". Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 41: 163–184.
  12. ^ Horváth, G. (1926). "Les noms génériques de nos trois grandes Cigales indigéenes". Annales Historico-Naturales Budapest. 23: 93–98.
  13. ^ Marshall, David C.; Hill, Kathy B. R.; Sanborn, Allen; Boulard, Michel; Puissant, Stéphane (June 2014). "Comments on Tibicina Amyot, 1847 and Lyristes Horváth, 1926 (Insecta, Hemiptera, Homoptera): proposed conservation by the suppression of Tibicen Berthold, 1827 [?Latreille, 1825], and concerning the type species of Cicada Linnaeus, 1758 (Case 239; see BZN 41: 163–184)". The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 71 (2): 103–131. doi:10.21805/bzn.v71i2.a10.
  14. ^ Hill, Kathy B. R.; Marshall, David C.; Moulds, Maxwell S.; Simon, Chris (10 July 2015). "Molecular phylogenetics, diversification, and systematics of Tibicen Latreille 1825 and allied cicadas of the tribe Cryptotympanini, with three new genera and emphasis on species from the USA and Canada(Hemiptera: Auchenorrhyncha: Cicadidae)". Zootaxa. 3985 (2): 219–251. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3985.2.3. PMID 26250031. S2CID 4331792.
  15. ^ Lee, Young June (29 June 2015). "Description of a new genus, Auritibicen gen. nov., of Cryptotympanini Hemiptera: Cicadidae) with redescriptions of Auritibicen pekinensis (Haupt, 1924) comb. nov. and Auritibicen slocumi (Chen, 1943) comb. nov. from China and a key to the species of Auritibicen". Zootaxa. 3980 (2): 241–254. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3980.2.5. PMID 26249950.
  16. ^ Sanborn, Allen F. (5 October 2015). "New combinations for six species belonging to Cryptotympanini Handlirsch (Hemiptera: Cicadidae), former members of the genus Tibicen Latreille, 1825". Zootaxa. 4027 (3): 447–450. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4027.3.9. PMID 26624191.
  17. ^ Sanborn, Allen F.; Heath, Maxine S. (16 September 2016). "Megatibicen n. gen., a new North American cicada genus (Hemiptera: Cicadidae: Cicadinae: Cryptotympanini)". Zootaxa. 4168 (3): 577–582. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.4168.3.10. PMID 27701330.
  18. ^ Marshall, D. C. (September 2015). "Comments on Tibicina Amyot, 1847 and Lyristes Horváth, 1926 (Insecta, Hemiptera, Homoptera): proposed conservation by the suppression of Tibicen Berthold, 1827 [?Latreille, 1825], and concerning the type species of Cicada Linnaeus, 1758 (Case 239; see BZN 41: 163–184; 71: 103–131; 179–180)". The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 72 (3): 217–219. doi:10.21805/bzn.v72i3.a10. S2CID 203873387.
  19. ^ Puissant, S.; Boulard, M.; Lee, Y. J.; Hayashi, M.; Wei, C.; Sueur, J. (September 2015). "Comments on Tibicina Amyot, 1847 and Lyristes Horváth, 1926 (Insecta, Hemiptera, Homoptera): proposed conservation by the suppression of Tibicen Berthold, 1827 [?Latreille, 1825], and concerning the type species of Cicada Linnaeus, 1758 (Case 239; see BZN 41: 163–184; 71: 103–131; 179–180)". The Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature. 72 (3): 219–220. doi:10.21805/bzn.v72i3.a10. S2CID 203873387.
  20. ^ International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. "The Code Online". www.iczn.org. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  21. ^ Handlirsch, A. (1925). "Ordung: Homoptera (Latr.) Westw. (Homopteren). In Systematische Übersicht (Schluss.). Handbuch der Entomologie / herausgegeben von Chr. Schröder. Gustav Fischer. Jena. 3 (17-18): 1102-1126". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  22. ^ Dmitriev, Dmitry; Sanborn, Allen (2023). "Priority and the names of two cicada tribes (Hemiptera: Cicadidae, Cicadinae: Tacuini and Tettigomyiinae: Anopercalnini)". Zootaxa. 5239 (1): 145–146. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.5239.1.9. PMID 37045105. S2CID 256671355.
  23. ^ Lee, Young June (December 2016). "Description of three new genera, Paratibicen, Gigatibicen, and Ameritibicen, of Cryptotympanini (Hemiptera: Cicadidae) and a key to their species". Journal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity. 9 (4): 448–454. doi:10.1016/j.japb.2016.09.002.

and 29 Related for: Tibicen information

Request time (Page generated in 0.5726 seconds.)

Australian magpie

Last Update:

The Australian magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) is a black and white passerine bird native to Australia and southern New Guinea, and introduced to New Zealand...

Word Count : 8264

Tibicen

Last Update:

Tibicen is a former genus name in the insect family Cicadidae (order Hemiptera) that was originally published by P. A. Latreille in 1825 and formally...

Word Count : 1731

Neotibicen tibicen

Last Update:

Canada. There are two subspecies, N. tibicen tibicen and N. tibicen australis, with the latter replacing subspecies tibicen in portions of Florida, Georgia...

Word Count : 407

Neotibicen linnei

Last Update:

Cicadidae Genus: Neotibicen Species: N. linnei Binomial name Neotibicen linnei (Smith and Grossbeck, 1907) Synonyms Tibicen linnei Smith and Grossbeck, 1907...

Word Count : 111

Aulos

Last Update:

musician who performed on an aulos. The ancient Roman equivalent was the tibicen (plural tibicines), from the Latin tibia, "pipe, aulos." The neologism...

Word Count : 1941

Centropyge tibicen

Last Update:

Centropyge tibicen, the keyhole angelfish, black angelfish, whitespot angelfish or puller angelfish, is a species of marine ray-finned fish, a marine...

Word Count : 555

Neotibicen

Last Update:

the misnomer locust. In 2015, these species were moved from the genus Tibicen (now genus Lyristes Horvath, 1926), which was redefined in the twenty-first...

Word Count : 916

Megatibicen auletes

Last Update:

740121 NatureServe: 2.115626 NCBI: 2565834 Open Tree of Life: 5834921 Tibicen auletes Wikidata: Q18394328 BugGuide: 6968 CoL: 8J7LW GBIF: 7753692 ITIS:...

Word Count : 100

Aspredinichthys tibicen

Last Update:

Aspredinichthys tibicen, the tenbarbed banjo, is a species of banjo catfish found in coastal brackish waters and coastal rivers in South America from...

Word Count : 91

Neotibicen dealbatus

Last Update:

used to be called Tibicen dealbatus, but in July 2015, after genetic and physiological evaluation and reconfiguration of the genus Tibicen, this cicada and...

Word Count : 912

Neotibicen pruinosus

Last Update:

used to be part of the genus Tibicen, until Tibicen was split into multiple genera. Neo is Greek for "new" while tibicen is Latin for "flute player" or...

Word Count : 609

Piping shrike

Last Update:

Shrikes”. The Latin name for the White-backed Magpie is Gymnorhina tibicen telonocua. Tibicen relates to piping or piper, hence the name Piping Shrike. The...

Word Count : 2445

Neotibicen auriferus

Last Update:

Auchenorrhyncha Family: Cicadidae Genus: Neotibicen Species: N. auriferus Binomial name Neotibicen auriferus (Say, 1825) Synonyms Tibicen auriferus Say, 1825...

Word Count : 28

Aleeta curvicosta

Last Update:

either treated as a subgenus of the genus Tibicen or a genus in its own right. Thus it became known as Tibicen curvicostus, and Abricta curvicosta from...

Word Count : 3556

Neotibicen bermudianus

Last Update:

Cicadidae Genus: Neotibicen Species: †N. bermudianus Binomial name †Neotibicen bermudianus (Verrill, 1902) Synonyms Tibicen bermudianus Verrill, 1902...

Word Count : 144

Megatibicen pronotalis

Last Update:

Megatibicen pronotalis, or Walker's cicada, is a species of cicada in the family Cicadidae. It is found in the northern Great Plains of the United States...

Word Count : 251

Cicada

Last Update:

United States and Canada Cicadas of Florida, Neocicada hieroglyphica, Tibicen, Diceroprocta and Melampsalta spp. at University of Florida/IFAS Featured...

Word Count : 7870

Magpie

Last Update:

corvids externally similar to magpies. The Australian magpie, Cracticus tibicen, is conspicuously "pied", with black and white plumage reminiscent of a...

Word Count : 1721

Hermit crab

Last Update:

crab to fall off. Some species such as Clibanarius tricolor, Calcinus tibicen and Pagurus miamensis are semi gregarious, showing unique behaviors in...

Word Count : 4352

Annual cicada

Last Update:

common annual cicada species of eastern North America (including the genera Tibicen, Diceroprocta, and Okanagana), and to hear their songs, see our Michigan...

Word Count : 199

Neotibicen superbus

Last Update:

(2015). "Molecular phylogenetics, diversification, and systematics of Tibicen Latreille 1825 and allied cicadas of the tribe Cryptotympanini, with three...

Word Count : 304

Talking bird

Last Update:

known to mimic human speech. One hand-raised Australian magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) developed the ability to mimic human speech, including words and phrases...

Word Count : 3965

Ngerulmud

Last Update:

dominates the site. The last syllable, mud, is the Palauan word for Centropyge tibicen, also known as the keyhole angelfish. In the past, under a local tradition...

Word Count : 943

List of Roman gladiator types

Last Update:

comedy show. An image from Pompeii shows a "flute playing bear" (Ursus tibicen) and a "horn-blowing chicken" (Pullus cornicen), that may have been part...

Word Count : 3182

Australian magpie in New Zealand

Last Update:

The Australian magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) is a medium-sized black and white passerine bird native to Australia and southern New Guinea. Three subspecies...

Word Count : 1187

List of Australian bird emblems

Last Update:

Queensland Brolga Grus rubicunda South Australia Piping shrike Gymnorhina tibicen telonocua Tasmania Yellow wattlebird (unofficial) Anthochaera paradoxa...

Word Count : 198

Diceroprocta vitripennis

Last Update:

(2015). "Molecular phylogenetics, diversification, and systematics of Tibicen Latreille 1825 and allied cicadas of the tribe Cryptotympanini, with three...

Word Count : 135

Gladiator

Last Update:

graffito suggests a burlesque of musicians, dressed as animals named Ursus tibicen (flute-playing bear) and Pullus cornicen (horn-blowing chicken), perhaps...

Word Count : 15160

Eastern copperhead

Last Update:

identified some consistently significant prey items included cicadas (Tibicen), caterpillars (Lepidoptera), lizards (Sceloporus and Scincella), voles...

Word Count : 4879

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net