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List of short species names

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Living organisms are known by scientific names. These binomial names can vary greatly in length, and some can be very short; genus or species names composed of only one letter are not allowed by any of the nomenclature codes, but any combination of two letters and above can be valid if it has not been previously used. This list of shortest species names lists the scientific binomials with the fewest letters.[1] The longest scientific species names can be found in the List of long species names.

4 letters

[edit]
Restoration of Yi qi (4 letters)
  • Ia io Thomas, 1902 – Family Vespertilionidae. The great evening bat is the largest vespertilionid bat, reaching a wingspan of just over half a metre. It occurs in tropical Asia where it lives in limestone caves. Apart from being the shortest scientific name of a living organism (and one of the shortest possible, since anything below 4 letters would not be allowed), it also has the peculiarity of being composed only of vowels. The genus Ia (ἰά) is an ancient Greek term for 'voice', 'cry' or 'shout';[2][3] the specific name has commonly been assumed to refer to Io, a woman of classical mythology, viewed as "flighty;"[4][5] but chiropterologist Thomas Griffiths has theorised that it is instead to be understood as the Latin interjection ĭō, meaning 'an exclamation of joy', and that therefore the corect English translation of the binomial would be 'Shout hurrah!'; Griffiths bolsters this argument by pointing out that Oldfield Thomas subsequently named another two species with the same word (Rhogeessa io and Balantiopteryx io), thus creating a succession of "three hurrahs", and proposes that this would be Thomas's way of celebrating his induction into the Royal Society in 1901, despite having no formal training.[6]
  • Yi qi Xu et al., 2015 – Family Scansoriopterygidae. This was a Jurassic theropod dinosaur that had an elongated finger which supported a patagium, akin to those of bats, which enabled the animal to glide between trees. The name is derived from Mandarin Chinese (翼 yì and 奇 qí, pronounced "ee chee"), meaning "strange wing".[7]

5 letters

[edit]
Drawing of Foa fo (5 letters)

6 letters

[edit]
Skull of Beg tse (6 letters)
Loa loa (6 letters)
Original illustration of Tor tor (6 letters)

7 letters

[edit]
Betta pi (7 letters)
Copa kei (7 letters)
Doto kya (7 letters)
Pine engraver beetle, Ips pini (7 letters)
Restoration of juvenile Mei long (7 letters)
Mini mum (7 letters)
Pao abei (7 letters)
Silver tussock or wī, Poa cita (7 letters)

Notes

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  1. ^ However, "πιεζοσ" is not a Greek word; this must be the result of a misreading. The Ancient Greek verb is πιέζω.

References

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