• Botanical nomenclature is independent of zoological, bacteriological, and viral nomenclature (see
Nomenclature codes). • A botanical name is fixed to a taxon by a
type. This is almost invariably dried plant material and is usually deposited and preserved in a
herbarium, although it may also be an image or a preserved culture. Some type collections can be viewed online at the websites of the herbaria in question. • A guiding principle in
botanical nomenclature is
priority, the first publication of a name for a taxon. The formal starting date for purposes of priority is 1 May 1753, the publication of
Species Plantarum by
Linnaeus. However, to avoid undesirable (destabilizing) effects of strict enforcement of priority,
conservation of family, genus, and species names is possible. • The intent of the Code is that each taxonomic group ("
taxon", plural "taxa") of plants has only one
correct name that is accepted worldwide, provided that it has the same
circumscription, position and
rank. The value of a scientific name is that it is an
identifier; it is not necessarily of descriptive value. • Names of taxa are treated as Latin. • The rules of nomenclature are retroactive unless there is an explicit statement that this does not apply. == History ==