1

Topic: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

1. Pieris napi (Green-veined White Butterfly) / rapae (Small White Butterfly) - we receive many of these records, where recorders have only seen the butterfly in flight.

2. Microtus agrestis (Field Vole) / Myodes glareolus (Bank Vole) - another ambiguity reported to us after recorders don't get a clear view of the animal. 

3. Empria basalis – a Sawfly first found in the UK a few years ago. Known in Europe and searchable on gbif.

A brief account of the first UK record:
http://www.record-lrc.co.uk/Downloads/S … 0GROUP%204[27052010].pdf

Many thanks

Gary

2

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

We don't need these first two suggested pseudotaxa.  For the butterflies, there is a genus which you can use.  For the voles there is a family.  If they are adopted, I will want a few myself: Englishman's Eagle for any soaring bird seen N of Perth; Something That Might Be A Bee (but might be almost any flying insect); Grey Seal/Common Seal/Fishing Float.  Others will follow.

M.

3

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

Empria basalis     Lindqvist, 1968

Steve

Steve J. McWilliam
www.rECOrd-LRC.co.uk
www.stevemcwilliam.co.uk/guitar/

4

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

I remember you are not a fan of these types of aggregates Murdo from the Great Bumbleebee Controversy. ;)

If no one else wants/needs the two aggegates or the current policy is to avoid adding aggregates where possible then please ignore, we have user added taxa in our R6 system for them for the handful of records we have (21 of the small/gvw white, 15 of vole sp.). We prefer not to take these up to genus/family and mix them up with large whites and mice since that would be losing information and we want to use our database to store data that is as accurate and precise as possible.

-----------------
Teresa Frost | Wetland Bird Survey National Organiser | BTO
Other hat  | National Forum for Biological Recording Council
(Old hats  | NBN Board, ALERC Board, CBDC, KMBRC)

5

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

I'd have to say I am with Murdo on this one, although I take your point Teresa.

One of the reasons we have had so many problems over the years with getting accurate reporting from the species dictionary is that some of the lists contained such aggregate pseudotaxa & this had knock-on effects for the synonymy. It seems to me that a taxon dictionary which is intended to serve as a de facto national standard ought to include only taxa which are well-formed taxonomically & make biological sense (rather than reflecting identification difficulties inherent in some groups).

Surely the best approach is to record as the next true taxon up the hierarchy but include a comment clarifying the uncertainty.

Rob Large
Wildlife Sites Officer
Wiltshire & Swindon Biological Records Centre

6

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

I can see no justification for these pseudotaxa at all, for the reason Rob says.  Once this starts, there is no end to it.  An aggregate animal taxon is fine where, for example, one 'species' is split into two or more species, and there is no way to reassign the older records (a mass of invertebrates, and even the Pipistrelles and Long-eared Bats).  What was suggested for the Bombus lucorum / terrestris pair (repeatedly, in different arenas) was to accommodate difficulty or impossibility in ID to species.  That one got through - but it is nonsensical, because you have to include with that pair B. soroeensis.  And if these, why not the brown carders?  And then with all the trendy 'Citizen Science' stuff you have to think about Eristalis intricarius, Volucella bombylans and other mimics.  Before you know it you are swimming in treacle.

Apart from the Bombus aberration, I can only find one other - the Comic Tern.  Fortunately we don't have Reed/Marsh/Blyth's Reed Warbler, Hen / Monty's Harriers (though there is an 'Indet. Harrier' which is given as Chordeiles, the US nighthawks, so there is a story somewhere there and a bit of work for Chris!), Glaucous / Iceland Gull, Willow-Chiff, and a mass of others.

There is no end to the possible combinations and permutations of potential imprecise IDs at species level.  As Rob says, the higher taxon and a comment is all that is needed.  To do anything else makes a mockery of what should be a high-quality scientific resource.

M.

7

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

I am confident the aggregates we use at CBDC are well justified and the most sensible solution to our needs. However I can appreciate that it may not be desirable to clutter the Species Dictionary with lots of these aggregates and that the lack of a few white butterfly and vole records will be no great loss to the Gateway

8

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

Of course the alternative, for Recorder 6 users at least, is to add them yourself (although you won't be able to transfer the data to anyone)

Charlie Barnes
Information Officer
Greater Lincolnshire Nature Partnership

9

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

Which might be for the best

Rob Large
Wildlife Sites Officer
Wiltshire & Swindon Biological Records Centre

10

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

We have added all of these (both "psuedo"taxa and new to science/GB) a long while ago to our own R6 system - one of the many useful things about the flexibility of R6. :) No scientific mockery intended, we are proud of the care we take in balancing taxonomy and field recording. It was just these were picked up by NBN Gateway staff from our latest datasets so thought we would raise. The challenges of what we allow people to record could be a timely debate for the NBN as a whole; there are certainly a lot of genus and higher records going in to iRecord.

I am no taxonomist or ecologist but I thought that sensu lato/stricto was what was used for splits rather than an aggregate? e.g. pipistrelle https://data.nbn.org.uk/Taxa/NHMSYS0020001356 vs bramble https://data.nbn.org.uk/Taxa/NBNSYS0000003328

Chris - in case it gets lost, please do add Empria basalis Lindqvist, 1968 it would be nice to have that on the Gateway.

-----------------
Teresa Frost | Wetland Bird Survey National Organiser | BTO
Other hat  | National Forum for Biological Recording Council
(Old hats  | NBN Board, ALERC Board, CBDC, KMBRC)

11

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

If it is in your own R6 system that is fine. That is not the same as being in UKSI.  And 'aggregate' is the term that was used by the first poster - I am well aware of s.l./s.s., and that 'aggregate' in the taxonomic usage is best reserved for non-animals.  It is after all a normal English word with no necessary taxonomic implications.

M.

12

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

Murdo says: “Apart from the Bombus aberration, I can only find one other - the Comic Tern.”

What about:
Aythya ferina/fuligula agg. [NBNSYS0100001880]
Boloria selene/euphrosyne  [NHMSYS0020083749]
Rhaphium appendiculatum/caliginosum [NHMSYS0020213815]
Hilara flavipes/obscura [NHMSYS0020083445]

.... to list the ones that have come to my attention this week?

Years ago when I was collating records for purely ‘academic’ purposes I would routinely dismiss all records not identified to species level as being of no interest. As more and different uses began to be made of our data I came to appreciate the value of ‘higher taxon’ records in some circumstances. However, in doing so it is surely best practice to represent the original identification as accurately and narrowly as possible in order to maximise its validity. So to represent a vole sighting as anything from a rat to harvest mouse by allocating it to the family ‘Muridae’ as Murdo suggests, is I think less useful than representing it as an ‘unidentified vole’ within the Muridae.

I am not sure I see any practical difference in terms of the Gateway in recording non-specific identifications at higher taxa level whether they are recognised taxonomic groupings or species aggregates within the systematic hierarchy – either way the treacle will be just as sticky and the ‘noise’ around species level records much the same. I agree though that being precise in representing records as accurately as possible is more work.

13

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

My view on recording aggregates is that they are OK as long as they give us something that we really need. That is, there must be a demand from recorders to have these and they must contribute to the whole aims of biodiversity recording. A trend that I am trying to avoid is the 'easy tick' aggregate, where an aggregate is proposed that allows a recorder to be lazy and get another tick on his list but which they could quite easily refine to species if they had tried harder. Obviously, this is balanced by allowing recording aggregates in some groups where we actively encourage novices to contribute - the entry-level groups.

In the case of the Pieris I think that this is such an obvious candidate that there must have been a good reason why we haven't created it already ... such as the fact that the genus would serve the same purpose. If the genera were different then I think I'd look on it more favourably. The same goes for the voles really. I'm not categorically against them but I think the discussion we have had here shows that there is certainly no great demand for them at the moment for the reasons given.

As for "Empria basalis Lindqvist, 1968" - I will get onto it right away :)

Thanks for the discussion everyone - good to know your feelings on quite an important point.

Best wishes,
Chris R.

Chris Raper, Manager of the UK Species Inventory, Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity,
Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, SW7 5BD.  (tel: 020 7942 5894)
also Tachinid Recording Scheme (http://tachinidae.org.uk/)

14

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

Just on the issue of aggregating white butterfly records, Emmet and Heath give the wingspans of Pieris as:
- Green-veined White: 40-52mm
- Small White: 38-57mm
- Large White: c. 58mm for males, c. 63mm for females

Given that this could mean a difference in wingspan of as little as 1mm between Small and Large whites, I would argue that if you haven't seen it clearly enough to know whether it is Small or Green-veined, then you haven't seen it clearly enough to rule out Large either. Therefore recording at genus level seems to me the most appropriate response for this aggregate.

Of course, I've also seen people confuse Pieris spp. with female Brimstones on a number of occasions ...

Martin Harvey
Biological Records Centre
CEH Wallingford

15

Re: Request for a new species and 2 new species aggregates to be added

Added Empria basalis Lindqvist, 1968
tvk NHMSYS0021004632

:)

Chris Raper, Manager of the UK Species Inventory, Angela Marmont Centre for UK Biodiversity,
Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, SW7 5BD.  (tel: 020 7942 5894)
also Tachinid Recording Scheme (http://tachinidae.org.uk/)