In Botany
In botanical nomenclature, the type for any given taxonomic name - if it has a type - is technically a specimen (or illustration). In the case of the name of a genus (or of a subdivision of a genus), its type will usually be the type for a species included within it and can be indicated by the name of this species alone. The term "type species", although of no formal standing under the Code, is sometimes borrowed from zoological nomenclature.
Read more about this topic: Type Species
Famous quotes containing the word botany:
“...some sort of false logic has crept into our schools, for the people whom I have seen doing housework or cooking know nothing of botany or chemistry, and the people who know botany and chemistry do not cook or sweep. The conclusion seems to be, if one knows chemistry she must not cook or do housework.”
—Ellen Henrietta Swallow Richards (18421911)