Willem Heijns wrote:In my opinion it is interesting, Tachymarptis (btw: why would Cichlid Room Experts want to hide behind a nickname?).
I am not hiding, Willem, I have reasons to do so; you (or anyone) only have to send me a personal message, or better, an e-mail, you will be be welcome. Anyway, this is not important.
To me it is quite logical to try and define taxa as natural groups.
I fully agree with this since I began to be fond of animal evolution during my childhood (since the beginning of the 70's). Let me say that I was already calling birds "flying dinosaurs" well before this allegory became "in the mood" (in fact, dinosaurs shoud better be defined as walking birds, this was their first identification in the beginning of the XIXth century, when the first tracks were found, before their skeletons were found and before the name "dinosaurs" was proposed). I was first enthusiast when the first classification upheavals came, but I found later that there were limitations to what we can do as "natural groups". These limitations are related to our historical classification in species, genera and so on, which was formalized by Linnaeus.
After all it reflects history and relationships in nature.
Let me put ahead an important fact which is often completely bypassed by current taxonomists: classifications were already attempting to reflect phylogeny, probably since Linnaeus himself. The trend, with more or less formalization, was to reflect life evolution and to avoid polyphyletic groupings. Cladistics have not invented phylogeny, it only is a good methodology to solve phylogenetic problems -and it is also an approximation. Of course, this speeded up the classifications improvements, as well as the arrival of new techniques (biomoleculars). But cladistic methods are also approximations.
Saying that in Linnean nomenclature it is impossible to do without paraphyletic taxa can be just as dogmatic.
I do not state that gratuitously. You will find as many examples as you want. Species give birth to other species, so unless they vanish completely, species are paraphyletic taxa. The reasoning is same for genera, which are, or are to become paraphyletic taxa if they do not disappear. For higher taxa, you could possibly (with great difficulties) keep them only as clades, but all ranks become obsolete, taxa become simple matryochka dolls with very few significance for use by human mind (hence Juan-Miguel's remark, which is shared by many people).
By the way, in case of monophyletic taxa, I use "clades" and "grades" (or "plesions"). In the litteral sense, paraphyletic taxa are monophyletic, i.e. from a single ancestor, even if they do not encompass all their descendants.
In this case the close relationship between Aequidens and Cichlasoma at least calls for a discussion about wether to keep these two genera apart or join them into one. What do you think?
Maybe it is of interest to merge Cichlasoma and Aequidens, but for the reasons given above, it must not be only for coping with this "paraphyly rule". Applying this rule without discernment is, in my opinion, dogmatic (sorry to insist). This clearly is the case with the "Xenotilapia black hole", which upsets most of us. But for Aequidens and Cichlasoma, why not? But with other arguments than the only "paraphyletic rule".
Sincerely,
Patrick.