The organization of taxon entries is arranged as follows-
Clade authorship
Definition- preferred phylogenetic definition of clade (original authorship
of definition)
Other definitions- alternate phylogenetic definitions of clade
= Synonymous clade authorship
Definition- preferred definition of synonymous clade
Other definitions- alternate phylogenetic definitions of synonymous clade
Genus authorship
= Synonymous genus authorship
pr= Probably synonymous genus authorship
po= Possibly synonymous genus authorship
G. species authorship
= Synonymous species authorship
pr= Probably synonymous species authorship
po= Possibly synonymous species authorship
Stage, Period
Formation, State/Province, Country
Holotype- (holotype specimen number; nickname; = previous specimen number(s)
of holotype) (total length; mass; ontogenetic stage) known element (length of
element)
Referred- (referred specimen number)
.........(referred specimen number belonging to same individual as above)
(referred specimen number of different individual)
?(questionably referred specimen number)
Diagnosis- apomorphy; apomorphy.
Description- Morphological description of taxon.
Comments- Non-morphological data.
References- Chronological list of pertinent references.
Other notes-
Clade definitions are modified to be congruent with the Phylocode,
but are abbreviated as follows-
(Alpha <- Beta) = "the clade consisting of Alpha and all organisms or
species that share a more recent common ancestor with Alpha than with Beta".
(Alpha + Beta) = "the clade stemming from the most recent common ancestor
of Alpha and Beta".
(apomorphy as in Alpha) = "The clade stemming from the first ancestor of
Alpha to exhibit the noted apomorphy homologous to the condition in Alpha".
Modifying published definitions to be congruent with Phylocode almost always
implies a supraspecific specifier was changed to a species specifier, so (Allosauridae
<- Aves) might be changed to (Allosaurus fragilis <- Passer
domesticus). This is usually an objective practice, as the eponymous genus
and its type species are used. The exception is when the specifier was originally
Avialae or a subgroup (Ornithurae, Aves, Neornithes, etc.), where no eponym
exists and both Passer domesticus and Vultur gryphus have been
suggested as avian specifiers. I've used Passer domesticus (as it is
the eponym of the largest avian clade) except in cases where Vultur gryphus
was originally used in the definition (generally by Gauthier and Clarke; since
it was the first avian species listed by Linnaeus).
No definitions are official until January 1, 200n, and I've been somewhat subjective
while choosing which to use. I follow priority, but also ensure definitions
use type species of eponymous genera which were part of the clade when it was
originally conceived. Occasionally, no acceptable definition has been published,
and in these cases a suggested definition is supplied.
Undefined family-level clade names are subjectively synonymized with defined
or valid clade names of the same Linnaean rank.
Other undefined eponymous clade names are placed directly above their genus,
as they provisionally have the same content.
Nomina dubia are not distinguished, except in the description or comments,
because they are subjective and may be found to be valid after further work.
Nomina nuda are distinguished by quotation marks. This website is not
an organ for formal taxonomic purposes, and thus any details contained about
nomina nuda do not in any way serve to validate them.
Misspellings are not noted, unless pertaining to a nomen nudum (which
have no official spelling).
Names that only appear in dissertations are not used out of respect for the
author.
For a preoccupied taxon, the original author and date that preoccupy the name
in question are given after said name, author and date, as in "Laelaps
Cope 1866 (preoccupied Koch 1835)".
For unnamed specimens, "unnamed" refers to a specimen described in
the literature, while "undescribed" refers to a specimen merely mentioned
in passing in the literature. Either of these may be followed by a clade name
(eg. Theropoda) or an informal version of that name (eg. theropod). "Undescribed
theropod" would refer to a single taxon, whereas "undescribed Theropoda"
refers to multiple possibly non-conspecific specimens.
The authorship of unnamed specimens is somewhat subjective, but is generally
the first author to mention the specimen, or the author of the most detailed
and/or recent description of the specimen.
Some data is referenced to abbreviated sources. These are-
DML- The Dinosaur Mailing List, whose archives can be read here - http://www.cmnh.org/dinoarch/index.html
.
TOL online- The Tree of Life
Web Project.
AMNH online- The online specimen
catalog of the American
Museum of Natural History.
MOR online- The online
specimen catalog of the Museum
of the Rockies.
UCMP online - The online specimen catalog
of the University of California Museum
of Paleontology.
YPM online- The online
specimen catalog of the Peabody Museum
of Natural History.
ZPAL online - The online specimen
catalog of the Institute of
Paleobiology Polish Academy of Sciences.