l_raty
laurent raty
There is no formal requirement to be register *names* (albeit it can be done, and is encouraged); and, as long as you keep publishing "old style", using ink on paper, absolutely no "new requirements" were made by the ICZN.I was entirely unaware of any need to register a new name, so may I ask how was this regulation disseminated?
The only thing that has changed, is that electronic publication, from being wholly forbidden for nomenclature purposes in the original 1999 edition of the Code, is now accepted as a possibility. But there are indeed some specific (new) requirements associated to this (new) type of publication -- one of which being that, to be validly published electronically, a *work* must be registered with ZooBank prior to its release. (Of course, valid publication is the very first requirement that any nomenclatural act must fulfil. Not just new names, by the way: also first reviser acts, acts of reversals of precedence, all the acts affecting the types of nominal taxa, such as type species fixation, lectotypification, neotypification, corrections of misidentified type species, etc.)
The Amendment was published in full by the ICZN in ZooKeys and Zootaxa; press releases were issued; the Internet version of the Code shows all the amended articles explicitly; the news that electronic publication was possible, was spread by many journals. But that all happened almost six years ago, now. (So I'm not sure it can really still be called "new"... And I presume those who were not involved in e-only publication back then, and to whom it didn't really matter, might understandably have forgotten some of the details.)
In the case of Auk (and M. eowilsoni), these requirements became suddenly relevant on Jan 1st, 2018, when the journal ceased to produce a regular paper edition. But the ICZN had nothing to do with this decision, so that it may be a bit unfair to blame them for its consequences, I would say.
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