Tropheus derivation of the name

New cichlid species and taxonomy

Tropheus derivation of the name

Postby James Shingler » Tue Jul 14, 2009 6:10 am

I am rather confused I read different derivations for this genus.

Greek "trophe" = "nutrition"
Greek "trophos" = "to nurture"
Greek tropho(s) = "nourished"
Greek, tropaion = defeat, a memorial of a fighting war, trophy; because of their specialized teeth were such an obvious feeding adaptation

Anyone know which, if any, is provably right?
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Re: Tropheus derivation of the name

Postby Bojan Dolenc » Tue Jul 14, 2009 7:54 am

In my opinion:
Tropheus (M) = from "trophos" = "to nurture", relating to their mouth brooding raring method and not "eater" relating to their obvious feeding specializations in the teeth or even from "nutrition".
So is also writen in the German book "Die namen unsere Aquarienfish" - Werner Schmettkamp (Landbuch Verlag GmbH, Hannover, 1985).
Change in habit, producing change of function, is the main cause of the production of change in living structure. F. Wood Jones (1953) Trends of life
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Re: Tropheus derivation of the name

Postby chris murphy » Tue Jul 14, 2009 3:52 pm

Trophos To foster
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Re: Tropheus derivation of the name

Postby a.d.wood » Fri Jul 17, 2009 6:22 am

I recently recieved the explanation below from a colleague when I was after some assistance on etymology for the Tropheus group:

Unusually Boulenger actually explains, and I quote, "The name proposed (Tropheus, one who rears, brings up, educates) refers to the peculiar mode of nursing the eggs described hereafter." You see, one of the type specimens of T. moorii was a female brooding 4 large eggs and this was new to Boulenger, he was familiar only with male mouthbrooding in Tilapia. He talks about it at length. He had no way of knowing that so many other taxa he described were also maternal mouthbrooders. We take it for granted!


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Re: Tropheus derivation of the name

Postby James Shingler » Sun Jul 19, 2009 9:00 am

Thank you all for the replies. Seems the answer is close. We know what feature of those first collected Tropheus was used to name them (Thanks to Andrews research).
But what word and translation was used seems to be still unclear or unproven.
Yes?
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