Thursday, 27 February 2025

How to rescue Bos taurus taxonomically

I once did a post on why I use Bos primigenius for the species of aurochs and cattle although it is predated by Bos taurus. Opinion 2027 of the ICZN allows this, and it has the advantage that Bos primigenius has a holotype, the incomplete Haßleben skeleton, while Bos taurus neither has a holotype nor a lectotype. However, I am not completely satisfied with that solution, because the fact that it is up to the author’s preference can create a lot of confusion. Apart from that, Bos taurus is the first name under which the aurochs was taxonomically classified (Linnaeus mentions it explicitly as “ferus Urus” in his description), so it should not end up on the taxonomical graveyard and it is questionable if opinion 2027 actually applied because the aurochs was included in the description. But how to clear up the mess and create a clear situation on what name to use for the species?
 
I see two options:
- The ICZN publishes a regulation for handling wildtypes and domesticates as different species. In this case, domestic cattle would be Bos taurus and Bos indicus, and the aurochs Bos primigenius.
- Someone does a proper redescription of Bos taurus, with a lectotype that is a “ferus Urus”, an aurochs and a few paratypes to account for the variability within the species, wild and domestic.
 
The upper option would not be useful. A universal species definition does not exist, and good arguments can both be made for the stance that domesticates are the same species as their wildtype and for the stance that they are different species. But the case of cattle shows that the latter is not practicable. Since taurine and indicine cattle descended from different variants of aurochs, they cannot form one species together that excludes the aurochs. In this case, all three (aurochs, taurine and indicine cattle) would have to be classified as separate species. Sanga cattle, which are hybrids of taurine and indicine cattle, would then be species hybrids. Hybrids between two species that only have minor differences and would without doubt be classified as one species if one did not know their evolutionary history. So the first option would be somewhat absurd.
The second option is what I would opt for. Linnaeus’ description of Bos taurus as much as Bojanus’ description of Bos primigenius are both rather minimalistic by modern standards, so a clear description that accounts for all the autapomorphies of the species of aurochs and cattle that sets them apart from other Bovini would be useful. As a lectotype (which is the type specimen assigned to a species based on a written description alone) I would use the rather complete skeleton from Neumark-Nord, which is mounted an impressive attacking pose (this one). It is very well-preserved, a typical aurochs and there is no chance that it is intermixed with domestic cattle as it is roughly 200.000 years old. I would also chose a few other specimen as paratypes, namely the Sassenberg cow (to account for the differences between male and female) and the Prejlerup bull (to cover the wide range of horn sizes within the species) and perhaps a few others.
 
The species of aurochs and cattle would then have to be labelled as Bos taurus. I think this name is just as beautiful as B. primigenius, as it just means “cattle” and it would include the wildtype which we call “aurochs”. On a subspecies level it would get a bit more complicated. If you regard domesticates as taxa (which doesn’t necessarily have to be, you could also just see them as populations that have experienced artificial selection), taurine cattle would be Bos taurus taurus and indicine cattle Bos taurus indicus, the aurochs would be Bos taurus primigenius. This would raise the question if the wild mainland aurochs needs to be subdivided into different subspecies. The latest research makes the approach of having several mainland aurochs subspecies questionable at least. I think “morphes” or “stages” might be more practicable. I go over this in my upcoming book, so please stay tuned.
 

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