A related usage is in a concept-author citation ("
sec. Smith", or "
sensu Smith"), indicating that the intended meaning is the one defined by that author. (Here "
sec." is an abbreviation of "
secundum", meaning "following" or "in accordance with".) Such an author citation is different from the citation of the nomenclatural
"author citation" or "authority citation". In biological taxonomy the author citation following the name of a taxon simply identifies the author who originally published the name and applied it to the
type, the specimen or specimens that one refers to in case of doubt about the definition of a species. Given that an author (such as Linnaeus, for example) was the first to supply a definite
type specimen and to describe it, it is to be hoped that his description would stand the tests of time and criticism, but even if it does not, then as far as practical the name that he had assigned will apply. It still will apply in preference to any subsequent names or descriptions that anyone proposes, whether his description was correct or not, and whether he had correctly identified its
biological affinities or not. This does not always happen of course; all sorts of errors occur in practice. For example, a collector might scoop a netful of small fish and describe them as a new species; it then might turn out that he had failed to notice that there were several (possibly unrelated) species in the net. It then is not clear what he had named, so his name can hardly be taken seriously, either
s.s. or s.l. After a species has been established in this manner, specialist
taxonomists may work on the subject and make certain types of changes in the light of new information. In modern practice it is greatly preferred that the collector of the specimens immediately passes them to specialists for naming; it is rarely possible for non-specialists to tell whether their specimens are of new species or not, and in modern times not many publications or their referees would accept an amateur description. In any event, the person who finally classifies and describes a species has the task of
taxonomic circumscription.
Circumscription means in essence that anyone competent in the matter can tell
which creatures are included in the species described, and which are excluded. It is in this process of
species description that the question of the
sense arises, because that is where the worker produces and argues their view of the proper circumscription. Equally, or perhaps even more strongly, the arguments for deciding questions concerning
higher taxa such as
families or
orders, require very difficult circumscription, where changing the
sense applied could totally upset an entire scheme of classification, either constructively or disastrously. Note that the principles of circumscription apply in various ways in non-biological senses. In biological taxonomy the usual assumption is that circumscription reflects the shared ancestry perceived as most likely in the light of the currently available information; in geology or legal contexts far wider and more arbitrary ranges of logical circumscription commonly apply, not necessarily formally uniformly. However, the usage of expressions incorporating
sensu remains functionally similarly intelligible among the fields. In geology for example, in which the concept of ancestry is looser and less pervasive than in biology, one finds usages such as: • "This ambiguity ... has led to a ... dual interpretation of the
Kimmeridgian Stage; the longer
sensu anglico meaning, or the shorter
sensu gallico meaning." Here the "
anglico" or English meaning referred to interpretations by English geologists, derived from English materials and conditions, whereas "
gallico" referred to interpretations by French and German geologists, derived from continental materials and conditions. • "...genetic stratigraphic sequences
sensu Galloway (1989)" meaning those sequences so referred to by Galloway, much as in the biological usage in referring to the terminology of particular authorities. Here we have a meta-reference: the
Pontian in the sense that Sacchi had applied it as
sensu stricto. ==Examples in practical taxonomy==