2011
DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3141.1.1
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Nomenclatural Studies Toward a World List of Diptera Genus-Group Names. Part II: Camillo Rondani

Abstract: The Diptera genus-group names of Camillo Rondani are reviewed and annotated. A total of 601 nomenclaturally available genus-group names in 82 families of Diptera are listed alphabetically. For each name the following are given: author, year and page of original publication, originally included species [and first included species if none were originally included], type species and method of fixation, current status of the name, family placement, and a list of any emendations of it that have been found in the li… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…For all genus-group names proposed for flies (Order Diptera ) Sherborn indexed 1,959. We have found another 43 which he missed and another 17 which he missed due to changes in the ICZN (plus a large number of orthographic variants, which by an unfortunate addition to the 4 th version of the ICZN are to be deemed unjustified emendations; Evenhuis, O’Hara et al 2010; O’Hara et al 2011 ). Thus, for Diptera Sherborn appears to have done even better than his overall average ( Welter-Schultes et al 2016 ).…”
Section: Sherborn’s Contribution To Dipterologymentioning
confidence: 86%
“…For all genus-group names proposed for flies (Order Diptera ) Sherborn indexed 1,959. We have found another 43 which he missed and another 17 which he missed due to changes in the ICZN (plus a large number of orthographic variants, which by an unfortunate addition to the 4 th version of the ICZN are to be deemed unjustified emendations; Evenhuis, O’Hara et al 2010; O’Hara et al 2011 ). Thus, for Diptera Sherborn appears to have done even better than his overall average ( Welter-Schultes et al 2016 ).…”
Section: Sherborn’s Contribution To Dipterologymentioning
confidence: 86%
“… DEXIMORPHA Rondani, 1856: 84. Type species: Deximorpha marittima Rondani, 1856 (as “ Dexia marittima Macq:”) (= Dexia picta Meigen, 1826), by original designation (see O’Hara et al 2011 : 72) [Palaearctic].…”
Section: Cataloguementioning
confidence: 99%
“…67.8: Dolichopus regius Fabricius. Bigot 1859: 230; Loew 1861: 69–70; Loew 1864: 198–200; Osten Sacken 1877: 318; Gobert 1887: 33; Bigot 1890: 277; Aldrich 1893: 569; Becker et al 1903: 343–344; Aldrich 1904: 271; Aldrich 1905: 298; Coquillett 1910: 561; Lundbeck 1912: 22, 352–356; Wahlgren 1912: 5, 48; Frey 1915: 74; Van Duzee 1917: 126; Becker 1917–1918: 160, 193; Becker 1922a: 117–119; Becker 1922b: 41; Curran 1926: 406–407; Parent 1932: 121–122; Curran 1934: 217; Parent 1938: 19, 268, 306; Parent 1939: 276; Harmston and Knowlton 1945: 55–56; Robinson 1964: 118, 182; Dyte 1967: 123; Cole 1969: 272, 282; Robinson 1970a: 59, 62; Robinson 1970b: 57; Dyte 1975: 241–242; D’Assis Fonseca 1978: 41; Negrobov 1978: 416–417; Negrobov 1979: 928; Robinson and Vockeroth 1981: 633, 635, 637; Hurley 1985: 3; Negrobov et al 1987: 157–158; Negrobov 1991: 41; Wei and Liu 1995: 35; Yang 1998: 153; Masunaga 2001: 109, 117–118; Pollet et al 2004: 52; Yang et al 2006: 19, 246; Bickel 2009: 683; Evenhuis and Bickel 2011: 4–5; O’Hara et al 2011: 30; Yang et al 2011: 363; Kahanpää 2014: 203.…”
Section: Taxonomymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[now treated as a Liancalus Loew, 1857] to " Hydrophorus Notatus Meig." [now treated as a Scellus Loew, 1857] (discussed in Hurley 1995 and O’Hara et al 2011). As a replacement name, Liancalus Loew would automatically take the type species of the name replaced, Hydrophorus notatus Meigen, making Liancalus a synonym of Scellus , and leaving the species currently in Liancalus without a generic name, thus threatening current usage of both Liancalus and Scellus , names and concepts that have been frequently and widely used.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%