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A tautonym is a of a species in which both parts of the name have the same spelling, such as . The first part of the name is the name of the genus and the second part is referred to as the specific epithet in the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants and the specific name in the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature.

Tautonymy (i.e., the usage of tautonymous names) is permissible in zoological nomenclature (see List of tautonyms for examples). In past editions of the zoological code, the term tautonym was used, but it has now been replaced by the more inclusive "tautonymous names"; these include for subspecies such as Gorilla gorilla gorilla and Bison bison bison.

Tautonyms can be formed when animals are given scientific names for the first time, or when they are reclassified and given new scientific names.

(2025). 9798350910759, BookBaby.
An example of the former is the hidden mirror skipper of Brazil with the scientific name Speculum speculum, which comes from a Latin word for "mirror" in reference to the shiny, mirror-like coloring on its wings.Stephan 2023, p. 149. An example of the latter is , an extinct kangaroo from the late Pleistocene epoch found in Papua New Guinea's Nombe Rockshelter that was classified as Protemnodon nombe until 2022 when it was reclassified in light of a more recent review of the animal's dental attributes.Stephan 2023, p. 36. Animals with tautonymous names can also be reclassified so that they no longer have tautonymous names, as was the case with Polyspila polyspila (now Calligrapha polyspila).Stephan 2023, p. 12.

For animals, a tautonym implicitly (though not always) indicates that the species is the of its genus. ICZN. Chapter 15 Art. 68.1 This can also be indicated by a species name with the specific epithet typus or typicus, ICZN. Chapter 15 Art. 68.2 although more commonly the type species is designated another way.

Regarding other living organisms, tautonyms were prohibited in bacteriological nomenclature from 1947 until 1975, but they are now permitted for all bacteria and .Stephan 2023, p. 209. Tautonyms are prohibited by the codes of nomenclature for botany and for cultivated plants, but they are not prohibited by the code of nomenclature for viruses.Stephan 2023, p. 208–210.


Botanical nomenclature
In the current rules for botanical nomenclature (which apply retroactively), tautonyms are explicitly prohibited. The reason for prohibiting tautonyms is not explained in current or historical botanical nomenclatural codes, but it appears to have resulted from concerns over a century ago that identical taxon names could result in confusion where those names share identical spelling and identical capitalization.Stephan 2023, pp. 208–215.

One example of a former botanical tautonym is 'Larix larix'. The earliest name for the is Pinus larix L. (1753) but Gustav Karl Wilhelm Hermann Karsten did not agree with the placement of the species in and decided to move it to in 1880. His proposed name created a tautonym. Under rules first established in 1906, which are applied retroactively, Larix larix cannot exist as a formal name. In such a case either the next earliest validly published name must be found, in this case Mill. (1768), or (in its absence) a new epithet must be published.

However, it is allowed for both parts of the name of a species to mean the same (), without being identical in spelling. For instance, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi means twice, in Greek and Latin respectively; uses the Latin and Serbian terms for a .

Instances that repeat the genus name with a slight modification, such as Lycopersicon lycopersicum (Greek and Latinized Greek, a rejected name for the ) and Ziziphus zizyphus, have been contentious, but are in accord with the Code of Nomenclature.

In April 2023, a proposal was made to permit tautonyms in botanical nomenclature on a non-retroactive basis, noting that tautonyms have been allowed in zoological and bacteriological codes for decades without incident, and that allowing tautonyms would simplify botany's nomenclatural code while eliminating certain naming problems and preserving the epithets originally assigned to species.


See also
  • List of tautonyms
  • Binomial nomenclature
  • List of tautological place names


External links

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