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The International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 December 2009
Summary
There can be no doubt that the diverse approaches to naming garden plants, by common names, by botanical names, by mixtures of botanical and common names, by group names and by fancy names, is no less complex than the former unregulated use of common or vernacular names. The psychology of advertising takes descriptive naming into yet new dimensions. It catches the eye with bargain offers of colourful, vigorous and hardy, large-headed, incurved Chrysanthemum cvs. by referring to them as HARDY FOOTBALL MUMS. Perhaps the director whose appointment was headlined ‘Football Mum appointed to Sainsburys’ hopes that she is also ‘hardy’. However, we are not here concerned with such colloquial names or the ethics of mail-order selling techniques but with the regulation of meaningful names under the Code.
In 1952, the Committee for the Nomenclature of Cultivated Plants of the International Botanical Congress and the International Horticultural Congress in London adopted the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants. Sometimes known as the Cultivated Code, it was first published in 1953 and has been revised several times at irregular intervals since then (Trehane, 1995, Brickell et al., 2004). This Code formally introduced the term ‘cultivar’ to encompass all varieties or derivatives of wild plants which are raised under cultivation, and its aim is to ‘promote uniformity and fixity in the naming of agricultural, sylvicultural and horticultural cultivars (varieties)’. The term culton (plural culta) is also proposed as an equivalent of the botanical term taxon.
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- The Names of Plants , pp. 26 - 29Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008