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Binomial nomenclature: Why am I seeing different genera with the same species name?

Biology Asked on April 4, 2021

I have looked online but still do not understand how two organisms can have the the same species names but be in different genera?

Do all genera share common species names?

Also which would be more closely related, two organisms with the same genus name but different species name or two organisms with different genus names but the same species name?

According to a textbook, the two with the same genus are more closely related, but I do not understand why?

2 Answers

Two different species can have the same species epithet if they belong to different genera ('species name' is referring to the full binomial name). Consider for example Pinus glabra and Ilex glabra

P. glabra

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I. glabra

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Two species can be have the same genus name (meaning they belong to the same genus) and will therefore necessarily have different species epithets (otherwise we would name them exactly the same way which would be very confusing). Consider for example Pinus glabra (again) and Pinus resionosa

P.glabra

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P. resinosa

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As a consequence, if two species share the same species epithet then it tells you nothing about how closely related they are. If they share the same genus name, then they belong to the same genus (except exceptions probably!).

For the above examples, the term glabra comes from "glaber" (latin) which means "Hairless". So the only thing you can tell from P. glabra and I. glabra is that they are probably both hairless when you compare them with their respective closely related species.

Correct answer by Remi.b on April 4, 2021

This is a widespread issue amongst binomial names. Only the full binomial name has to be unique in nomenclature, and therefore many genera contain different organisms with the same specific epithet. As Remi.b has already mentioned, two organisms with binomial names that have the same species but different genus are very likely more different from each other than two organisms that share a genus but have a different specific epithet.

For example, the Wikipedia page on the specific epithet "Officinalis" lists dozens of organisms with a variant of that specific epithet conforming to the Latin declension of its genus.

This list consists of organisms which are completely unrelated to each other, containing fungi, plants and animals.

Althaea officinalis (marshmallow)
Anchusa officinalis (bugloss)
Archangelica officinalis (angelica)
Asparagus officinalis (asparagus)
Avicennia officinalis (mangrove)
Bistorta officinalis (European bistort)
Borago officinalis (borage)
Buddleja officinalis (pole butterflybush)
Calendula officinalis (pot marigold)
Cinchona officinalis (quinine)
Cochlearia officinalis (scurvygrass)
Corallina officinalis (a seaweed)
Cornus officinalis (cornelian cherry)
Cyathula officinalis (ox knee)
Cynoglossum officinale (houndstongue)           
Euphrasia officinalis (eyebright)
Fumaria officinalis (fumitory)
Galega officinalis (goat's rue)
Gratiola officinalis (hedge hyssop)
Guaiacum officinale (lignum vitae)
Hyssopus officinalis (hyssop)
Jasminum officinale (jasmine)
Laricifomes officinalis (a wood fungus)
Lavandula officinalis (lavender)
Levisticum officinale (lovage)
Lithospermum officinale (gromwell)
Magnolia officinalis (magnolia)
Melilotus officinalis (ribbed melilot)
Melissa officinalis (lemon balm)
Morinda officinalis (Indian mulberry)
Nasturtium officinale (watercress)
Paeonia officinalis (common paeony)
Parietaria officinalis (upright pellitory)
Primula officinalis (cowslip)
Pulmonaria officinalis (lungwort)
Rheum officinale (a rhubarb)
Rosa gallica 'Officinalis' (apothecary rose)
Rosmarinus officinalis (rosemary)
Salvia officinalis (sage)
Sanguisorba officinalis (great burnet)
Saponaria officinalis (soapwort)
Sepia officinalis (cuttlefish)
Sisymbrium officinale (hedge mustard)
Spongia officinalis (bath sponge)
Stachys officinalis (betony)
Styrax officinalis (drug snowbell)
Symphytum officinale (comfrey)
Taraxacum officinale (dandelion)
Tormentilla officinalis (tormentil)
Valeriana officinalis (valerian)
Verbena officinalis (vervain)
Veronica officinalis (speedwell)
Zingiber officinale (ginger)

Answered by March Ho on April 4, 2021

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