The naming of families is codified by various international bodies using the following suffixes: • In fungal, algal, and
botanical nomenclature, the family names of plants, fungi, and algae end with the suffix "
-aceae", except for a small number of historic but widely used names including
Compositae (also known as Asteraceae) and
Gramineae (also known as Poaceae). • In
zoological nomenclature, the family names of animals end with the suffix "
-idae". Name changes at the family level are regulated by the codes of nomenclature. For botanical families, some traditional names like Palmae (
Arecaceae), Cruciferae (
Brassicaceae), and Leguminosae (
Fabaceae) are conserved alongside their standardized -aceae forms due to their historical significance and widespread use in the literature. Family names are typically formed from the stem of a
type genus within the family. In zoology, when a valid family name is based on a genus that is later found to be a
junior synonym, the family name may be maintained for stability if it was established before 1960. In botany, some family names that were found to be junior synonyms have been
conserved due to their widespread use in the scientific literature. The family-group in zoological nomenclature includes several ranks:
superfamily (-oidea), family (-idae),
subfamily (-inae), and
tribe (-ini). Under the principle of coordination, a name established at any of these ranks can be moved to another rank while retaining its original authorship and date, requiring only a change in suffix to reflect its new rank. New family descriptions are relatively rare in taxonomy, occurring in fewer than one in a hundred taxonomic publications. Such descriptions typically result from either the discovery of organisms with unique combinations of characters that do not fit existing families, or from
phylogenetic analyses that reveal the need for reclassification. ==History==