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Mosulishvili & al. • (2511) Conserve Triticum palaeocolchicum
(2511) Proposal to conserve the name Triticum palaeocolchicum against
T. karamyschevii (Poaceae)
Marine Mosulishvili,1,2 Ineza Maisaia3,4 & Ketevan Batsatsashvili1,3
1 Institute of Ecology, Ilia State University, 3/5 Cholokashvili Ave., 0162 Tbilisi, Georgia
2 Georgian National Museum, Herbarium, 3 Rustaveli Ave, 0105 Tbilisi, Georgia
3 Institute of Botany, Ilia State University, 1 Botanikurist., 0107 Tbilisi, Georgia
4 The National Botanical Garden of Georgia, 1 Botanikurist., 0107 Tbilisi, Georgia
Author for correspondence: Marine Mosulishvili, marine_mosulishvili@iliauni.edu.ge
DOI https://doi.org/10.12705/662.23
(2511) Triticum palaeocolchicum Menabde in Soobshch. Gruzinsk.
Fil. Akad. Nauk S.S.S.R. 1: 686. 1940 (‘palaeo-colchicum’)
[Angiosp.: Gram.], nom. cons. prop.
Typus: [icon in] Supatashvili in Vestn. Inst. Exp. Agron.
Gruzii 1: 92–93, t. 2, fig. 1, 2, 3. 1929.
(≡)
Triticum karamyschevii Nevski in Sovetsk. Bot. 6: 127. 1935,
nom. rej. prop.
The name Triticum karamyschevii Nevski did not occur in works
by triticologists from 1935, the time of its publication by Nevski (l.c.
1935), until 1979 when Dorofeev & al. (in Dorofeev & Korovina,
Kult. Fl. SSSR, ed. 2, 1: 69–73. 1979) adopted the name. Triticum
karamyschevii Nevski is validly published as a replacement name
for T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum Supat. (in Vestn. Inst. Exp. Agron.
Gruzii 1: 83–98. 1929). In publishing T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum
Supatashvili (l.c.) gave a detailed morphological description in three
languages: Georgian (l.c.: 92–94), Russian (l.c.: 95–96), and English
(l.c.: 97–98), and included a figure (l.c.: t. 2, fig. 1, 2, 3). In the absence
of any surviving specimens, we designate here the illustration in
Vestn. Inst. Exp. Agron. Gruzii 1: t. 2, fig. 1, 2, 3. 1929 as lectotype
of T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum (Art. 8.1 of the ICN, McNeill & al.
in Regnum Veg. 154. 2012).
Nevski (l.c. 1935) stated that it was indisputable that “T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum Supat. (= T. dicoccum grex georgicum Dekapr.
et Menabde)” represented a distinct species and proposed the name
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Mosulishvili & al. • (2511) Conserve Triticum palaeocolchicum
T. karamyschevii for it; as noted, the replaced name was published by Supatashvili (l.c.) and the synonym, the “grex” name, by
Dekaprelevich & Menabde (in Trudy Prikl. Bot., ser. 5, Zernov. Kul’t.
1: 3–46. 1932). Nevski (l.c. 1935) cited Supatashvili (l.c.) indirectly in
publishing his replacement name as “Triticum Karamyschevii Nevski
sp. n. (= Triticum dicoccum var. chvamlicum Supat. ex Dekapr. et
Menabde in Bull of appl. Bot., of Genet and Plant Breed., Series V,
1 (1932) 1933 p. 13 f. 1)”.
In 1934 Nevski had published the account of the genus Triticum
(Nevski in Komarov, Fl. SSSR 2: 675–688. 1934) but he included neither T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum, nor T. dicoccum grex georgicum
among his accepted names and synonyms. Nevski (l.c. 1935), in reply
to an unpublished critical letter from Flaksberger, on why he had not
mentioned this taxon in his Flora account, wrote that the description
of T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum was published by Supatashvili (l.c.)
in Georgian (in fact it was also published in Russian [l.c.: 96] and
English [l.c.: 98]) and only in 1933 had he [Nevski] seen a detailed
Russian description in the article “Hulled wheats of West Georgia”
by Dekaprelevich & Menabde (l.c.), by which time it was too late to
include the taxon in the Flora. On the basis of morphological features and geographical distribution (only West Georgia) of the variety
(“разновидность”) “chvamlicum”, Dekaprelevich & Menabde (l.c.: 14)
indicated that it was a morphologically and geographically well isolated taxon that supported its recognition as a new infraspecific taxon,
T. dicoccum grex georgicum Dekapr. & Menabde (l.c.: 12–14); as no
other material was discussed in the account of the new “grex”, the name
is necessarily typified by the type of T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum.
No Latin description is provided by Nevski and so valid publication must be as a replacement name. Nevski (l.c. 1935) cited “p. 13,
fig. 1 [in fact the photo is on p. 12, not on p. 13]” as an illustration
of T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum. As the replaced synonym Nevski
(l.c. 1935) indicated the author of T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum as
Supat. ex Dekapr. & Menabde, but when “ex” is a component of an
author citation, it indicates that the author before the “ex” (i.e., Supat.
[Supatashvili]) did not validly publish the name, but that it was subsequently validly published by the authorship following the “ex” (Art.
46.5), in this case by Dekaprelevich & Menabde. However, the name
was validly published by Supatashvili (l.c.) in compliance with all the
relevant rules of ICN, and so T. karamyschevii is necessarily typified
by the type of T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum Supat. (Art. 7.4 of the ICN).
In 1940 Menabde (l.c.) published the new species name T. palaeocolchicum Menabde. Although a detailed Latin description was provided, Menabde (l.c.) explicitly published this as a replacement name
(“nomen novum”) for T. dicoccum subsp. georgicum (Dekapr. &
Menabde) Flaksb. (in Wulff, Kult. Fl. SSSR 1: 301. 1935). The epithet
palaeocolchicum was adopted as carbonized seeds of the taxon were
found at an archaeological site of the Neolithic Period at the Colchic
(“Kolkhis”) area in 1940 in West Georgia. Within T. palaeocochicum
Menabde distinguished two infraspecific taxa: T. palaeocolchicum
var. chvamlicum (Supat.) Menabde and T. palaeocolchicum var.
rubidium Menabde; brief Latin descriptions are provided for the two
varieties, distinguishing var. rubidum by its reddish spikes.
Because T. karamyshevii is validly published as a replacement
name for T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum, the later T. palaeocolchicum
is nomenclaturally superfluous and illegitimate as it included that
variety in its circumscription (ICN Art. 52.1, 52.2(d)). However, as
Menabde explicitly published his name as a replacement for T. dicoccum subsp. georgicum, it is to be typified by the type of that name,
which being that of T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum (see above) happens
to be the same as that of T. karamyshevii. The name T. karamyshevii
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was never used as an accepted name either in Georgia, where the
plant is endemic, or in most parts of the world, including Russia, up
to 1979 when the account of Wheat (Пшеница) in the second edition
of Культурная Флора СССР was published (Dorofeev & al., l.c.:
69). This name was not adopted by any Russian wheat monographers
(e.g., Flaksberger, l.c.: 293, 301–302; Vavilov, Mirovye Resursy 2.
Pshenitsa: 26–27. 1964; Dorofeev in Trudy Prikl. Bot. 39(3): 98–99.
1969; 47(1): 48. 1972) from the time of its publication by Nevski in 1935,
up to 1979. After 1979 the name T. karamyschevii started to appear in
the scientific literature (e.g., Golovnina & al. in Pl. Syst. Evol. 264:
195–216. 2007; Goncharov & al. in Breed. Sci. 59: 492–498. 2009;
Goncharov, Sravnitelnaia Genetika Pshenits, ed. 2. 2012; Badaeva &
al. in PLoS ONE 10 (5): e0128556. 2015; Konopatskaia & al. in B. M. C.
Pl. Biol. 16: 93–106. 2016).
Dorofeev & al. (l.c.: 72) emphasized (our translation) that “…
species T. karamyschevii was first adopted by Supatashvili (1929)
as a variety (var. chvamlicum Supat.) of the species T. dicoccum;
later Dekaprelevich & Menabde (1932) distinguished it as a special
section grex georgicum within the same species (T. dicoccum); Flaksberger (1935) considered this group (grex georgicum) in the rank of
subspecies [as T. dicoccum subsp. georgicum (Dekapr. & Menabde)
Flaksb.]. The first who recognized this wheat at the species level was
Nevski (1935). Before 1940 Colchic emmer appeared in the literature as T. dicoccum subsp. georgicum (Dekapr. & Menabde) Flaksb.
(Flaksberger, 1935; Vavilov, 1964; Dorofeev, 1969). In 1940 Menabde
raised Colchic emmer to the rank of species as T. palaeocolchicum
(synonym of T. karamyschevii).” The species name for Colchic emmer
T. palaeocolchicum (although after 1976 in many cases mis-spelled
“T. paleocolchicum” first adopted by Tzvelev, Zlaki SSSR: 165. 1976)
was used continuously from the publication of this name by Menabde
in 1940 until 1979 but even to the present time the name has continued
to be used by some triticologists (e.g., Slageren in Wageningen Agric.
Univ. Pap. 94-7: 91–92. 1994; Mori & al. in Genes Genet. Systems
72: 153–161. 1997; Gill & al. in Israel J. Pl. Sci. 55: 223–229. 2007;
Matsuoka in Pl. Cell Physiol. 52: 750–764. 2011; Gornicki & al. in
New Phytol. 204: 704–714. 2014; Shewry & Hey in J. Cereal Sci. 65:
236–243. 2015).
As Goncharov (in Pl. Syst. Evol. 295: 1–11. 2011) noted: “The
taxonomy of many cultivated plants is controversial. This is causing
confusion within the global wheat research community because Western scientists, for the most part, follow treatments based on MacKey’s
[in Biol. Zentralbl. 107: 369–379. 1988] classification, whereas Eastern
[i.e., Russian] scientists, again with some exceptions, follow treatments based on the treatment by Dorofeev & al. (1979).”
The problem is that different names are assigned to the seed
samples of this species in various genebanks; e.g., seed samples of this
species are stored under the name of Triticum turgidum subsp. palaeocolchicum Á. Löve & D. Löve at the USDA-ARS, the world’s largest
agricultural research complex. In contrast, the name T. karamyschevii is used at the Vavilov Institute of Plant Industry (St. Petersburg,
Russia), which maintains the largest collection of Transcaucasian
wheat seeds. Also, in IPNI at the specific rank the taxon is only
given as “T. palaeo-colchicum” Menabde with its original hyphenated spelling (to be corrected to “palaeocolchicum”, under Art. 60.9),
while T. karamyschevii is not listed at all. Slageren (l.c.) adopted the
spelling “T. turgidum subsp. paleocolchicum” as used by Tzvelev
(l.c.) at species rank. This spelling is used more frequently in recent
scientific papers compared to the original one. However, we propose
to conserve the name with the original spelling of the epithet, which
is also currently used at the USDA-ARS.
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Mosulishvili & al. • (2511) Conserve Triticum palaeocolchicum
Triticum palaeocolchicum is one of the key species in the evolution of the genus Triticum and it is widely used in molecular systematics and plant breeding. Scientists who work in wheat DNA research
obtain seeds of this species mostly from the Vavilov Institute of Plant
Industry. Therefore, in the scientific papers on DNA studies the name
T. karamyschevii has begun to appear more often in the recent period,
especially in the last 3–4 years.
For taxonomic stability and a better monitoring of the numerous
accessions in gene banks, every taxon must have only one validly published name. “Each taxonomic group with a particular circumscription, position and rank can bear only one correct name, the earliest
that is in accordance with the Rules, except in specified cases (ICN
principle IV).”
Thus, although T. karamyshevii is a validly published replacement name at species rank for T. dicoccum var. chvamlicum, the latter
is a variety of T. palaeocolchicum (Menabde, l.c.: 686; Dorofeev &
al., l.c.: 73). For this reason, and because the epithet “palaeocolchicum” has priority at subspecific rank, we consider that the name
T. palaeocolchicum should be used as the conserved name for the
Colchic emmer. It is desirable to encourage stability of nomenclature,
and this proposal for conservation of T. palaeocolchicum would be a
step in that direction. It is appropriate to conserve the scientific name
T. palaeocolchicum Menabde against T. karamyshevii Nevski. The
alternative would be to use the replacement name, the name “forgotten” for more than 40 years.
Acknowledgement
We are profoundly grateful to John McNeill for the valuable comments on the manuscript and suggestions that improved this paper.
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