• The Wrasse
Pastel ringwrasse,
Hologymnosus doliatus was originally formally
described as
Labrus doliatus in 1801 by
Bernard Germain de Lacépède in Volume 5 of his
Histoire naturelle des poissons based on a drawing by Commerson. In 1801 Lacépède created the
genus Hologymnosus and designated a species,
Hologymnosus fasciatus, he had just described as its
type species, this was later shown to be a
synonym of
H. doliatus. • Commerson provided the first description of the
Ring-tailed cardinalfish (
Ostorhinchus aureus) from
Réunion in the western
Indian Ocean, but it was not published in a format allowing full citation. Therefore, the
species name and description by
Bernard Germain de Lacépède (who acknowledged Commerson) takes precedence, albeit with a nod to Commerson. •
Gomphosus caeruleus was formally
described in 1801 by Bernard Germain de Lacépède in the third volume of his
Histoire naturelle des poissons from
types collected by Commerson. No
type locality was given, but now it is known to be Mauritius. sometime before 1780 for the book
Histoire Naturelle. • The first notes taken on
Rufous hornero Furnarius rufus were made by Commerson in 1767, from a specimen obtained at
Barragán cove during
Louis Antoine de Bougainville's expedition. Commerson named the bird as
Turdus fulvus and his notes were later published by
Georges Buffon in his
Histoire Naturelle in 1779. However, the rufous hornero was first scientifically described, as
Merops rufus, by the German naturalist
Johann Friedrich Gmelin in the 13th edition of
Systema Naturae published in 1788. •
Scatophagus tetracanthus was first formally
described Chaetodon tetracanthus as in 1802 by the French
naturalist Bernard Germain de Lacépède with no
type locality given, Lacépède's description was based on a drawing and manuscript by Commerson. The
specific name is a
compound of
tetra meaning "four" and
acanthus which means "spines", a reference to the four
anal fin spines. •
Hologymnosus annulatus was formally
described in 1801 as
Labrus annulatus by
Bernard Germain de Lacépède in Volume 3 of his
Histoire naturelle des poissons with the
type locality given as Mauritius. Lacépède was following earlier work by Commerson. •
Trachinotus baillonii was formally
described in 1801 by the
French naturalist Bernard Germain de Lacépède (1726-1825) as
Caesiomorus bailloni, the name having been written in a manuscript by Commerson, but was not formally published. The identity of the person nonoured in the
specific name is not clear but is either the French naturalist
Louis Antoine François Baillon (1778-1851), or his father
Jean François Emmanuel Baillon (1742-1801), who was also a naturalist. •
Artocarpus heterophyllus was named by
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck ==Death==