Authors
Donald R Prothero, Daryl Domning, R Ewan Fordyce, Scott Foss, Christine Janis, Spencer Lucas, Katherine L Marriott, Grégoire Metais, Darren Naish, Kevin Padian, Gertrud Rössner, Nikos Solounias, Michelle Spaulding, Richard M Stucky, Jessica Theodor, Mark Uhen
Publication date
2022/3/1
Journal
Journal of Mammalian Evolution
Pages
1-5
Publisher
Springer US
Description
The name “Cetartiodactyla” was proposed in 1997 to reflect the molecular data that suggested that Cetacea is closely related to Artiodactyla. Since then, that taxon has spread in popularity, even outside the scientific literature. However, the implications of the name are confusing, because Cetacea and Artiodactyla are not sister-taxa. Instead, the evidence clearly shows that cetaceans are a group embedded within Artiodactyla, not a sister-taxon of equal rank. It has long been accepted practice that systematists do not modify the names of higher groups when new subgroups are added to them. For example, Owen’s original concept of Artiodactyla did not change its name when more and more disparate taxa were added to it. Dinosauria did not become “Avedinosauria” when it became clear that birds are a subgroup of dinosaurs, nor did Reptilia become “Avereptilia”. In the interests of taxonomic priority and …
Total citations
202120222023202419103
Scholar articles
DR Prothero, D Domning, RE Fordyce, S Foss, C Janis… - Journal of Mammalian Evolution, 2022