Taxonomy Notes from Flann et al. 2010 Taxon 59: Type - (not in protologue, designated by Greuter & al., 2005a: 165): Bidens...
Taxonomy Notes from Flann et al. 2010 Taxon 59: Type - (not in protologue, designated by Greuter & al., 2005a: 165): Bidens tripartitus L Notes: IK attributes validation of Vaillant’s name to Cassini (in Cuvier, Dict. Sci. Nat. 7: 432 1817), but there, in spite of the misleading typography, Cassini does not accept Ceratocephalus, he merely refers the reader to his later entry Kerneria (in fact: Bidens subg. Kerneria Cass. in Cuvier , Dict. Sci. Nat. 24: 397 1822). Cassini mentions an earlier use of Ceratocephalus by Richard [in Marthe, Cat. Pl. Jard. Méd. Paris: 91. 1800 or 1801], but in that work there is nothing to validate the generic name (only the combination C. pilosus, based on Bidens pilosus L., is proposed). Upon approval of any of three pending proposals to outlaw the German translation of Vaillant’s work on Compositae for nomenclatural purposes (Brummitt, 2008; Greuter, 2008a; Sennikov, 2010), the name Ceratocephalus, in the sense of Bidens, will apparently cease to exist. [details]
Compositae Working Group (CWG) (2021). Global Compositae Database. Ceratocephalus Vaill.. Accessed at: https://www.compositae.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1078838 on 2024-04-28
original descriptionKönigl. Akad. Wiss. Paris Phys. Abh. 5: 599 page(s): 599 [details]
From other sources
LSID urn:lsid:compositae.org:names:4567B8B2-86C2-4143-B8A9-E5D9F41700E9 [details] Taxonomy Notes from Flann et al. 2010 Taxon 59: Type - (not in protologue, designated by Greuter & al., 2005a: 165): Bidens tripartitus L Notes: IK attributes validation of Vaillant’s name to Cassini (in Cuvier, Dict. Sci. Nat. 7: 432 1817), but there, in spite of the misleading typography, Cassini does not accept Ceratocephalus, he merely refers the reader to his later entry Kerneria (in fact: Bidens subg. Kerneria Cass. in Cuvier , Dict. Sci. Nat. 24: 397 1822). Cassini mentions an earlier use of Ceratocephalus by Richard [in Marthe, Cat. Pl. Jard. Méd. Paris: 91. 1800 or 1801], but in that work there is nothing to validate the generic name (only the combination C. pilosus, based on Bidens pilosus L., is proposed). Upon approval of any of three pending proposals to outlaw the German translation of Vaillant’s work on Compositae for nomenclatural purposes (Brummitt, 2008; Greuter, 2008a; Sennikov, 2010), the name Ceratocephalus, in the sense of Bidens, will apparently cease to exist. [details]