There are many examples of paraphyletic groups, but true "wastebasket" taxa are those that are known not to, and perhaps not intended to, represent natural groups, but are nevertheless used as convenient groups of organisms. The kingdom
Protista (see below) is perhaps the most famous example. Wastebasket taxa are often old (and perhaps not described with the systematic rigour and precision that is possible in the light of accumulated knowledge of diversity) and populous. • The
Flacourtiaceae, a now-defunct family of
flowering plants – the
Angiosperm Phylogeny Group has placed its
tribes and genera in various other families, especially the
Achariaceae and
Salicaceae. • The obsolete kingdom
Protista is composed of all
eukaryotes that are not
animals,
plants or
fungi, leaving to the protists all single-celled eukaryotes. • The
Tricholomataceae is a fungal group, at one point composed of the white-, yellow-, or pink-spored genera in the
Agaricales not already classified as belonging to the
Amanitaceae,
Lepiotaceae,
Hygrophoraceae,
Pluteaceae, or
Entolomataceae. •
Carnosauria and
Thecodontia are fossil groups, banded together back when the limited fossil record did not allow for a more detailed scheme. •
Condylarthra is an artificial clade into which ungulate mammals not clearly within
Perissodactyla or
Cetartiodactyla were traditionally shoved. Many of these groups, like
Meridiungulata or
Protungulatum, may not represent
laurasitherian mammals, while others like
phenacodontids have been clearly established as early odd-toed ungulates. • The order
Insectivora has traditionally been used as a dumping ground for placental insectivorous mammals (and similar forms such as
colugos), usually aligned with
carnivorans,
ungulates and
bats. While the core components (
moles,
shrews,
hedgehogs and their close relations) do in fact form a consistent clade,
Eulipotyphla, that is part of
Laurasiatheria with the aforementioned clades, other mammals historically placed in the order have been found to belong to other branches of the placental tree:
tree shrews and colugos are
euarchontans related to
Primates and sometimes grouped in
Sundatheria, while
tenrecs,
golden moles and
elephant shrews are all
afrotheres, probably forming the clade
Afroinsectiphilia. Both of these clades have at times been accused of being wastebasket taxa themselves, grouping superficially similar animals in Euarchonta and Afrotheria, respectively, but they have been more strongly supported by genetic studies. •
Vermes is an obsolete taxon of worm-like animals. It was a catch-all term used by
Carl Linnaeus and
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck for non-arthropod invertebrate animals. • The genus
Mamenchisaurus is sometimes considered a wastebasket taxon for large, long-necked
dinosaurs. ==Paleontology==