80
Beetle classification
BEETLE CLASSIFICATION
Our system for classification of beetles dates back
to the Swedish physician and botanist Carolus
Linnaeus (1707–78), who published the basis for
zoological nomenclature in the tenth edition of
his Systema Naturae (System of Nature). Linnaeus
recognized what he considered to be distinct species,
and gave each a Latin-based binominal name
consisting of a genus, which it shared with other
similar creatures, and a species name that was
unique within each genus. The result was that every
species received an exclusive name, but was also in
a genus with similar creatures. We would, of course,
say “related” today, and it is difficult to remember
that Linnaeus was working on imposing order on
the astonishing diversity of life, without any
evolutionary framework, and that his classification
predates the publication of Darwin’s Origin of Species
(1859) by more than a hundred years. He was
recognizing similarity without the philosophical
tools to comprehend the reasons for it.
Linnaeus’s visionary nature is reflected in the
fact that we still use his system today, and the
“Scientific Names”—also called “Latin Names”
or “Latin Binominals”—are regulated by the
International Commission on Zoological
Nomenclature, a body of distinguished scientists
from around the world that is currently based
in Singapore. Linnaeus’s importance was
recognized by his contemporaries. Indeed, the
philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau sent him the
message: “Tell him I know no greater man on
earth,” while Goethe wrote “With the exception
of Shakespeare and Spinoza, I know no one …
who has influenced me more strongly.”
Linnaeus’s genius was in devising a simple
system that could be extended and was effectively
future-proof. He used Latin simply because it was
the language of scholarship at the time, but this
was ultimately fortuitous, because it meant that
scientists could communicate about organisms
using a universal language.
Subsequent generations, starting with
Linnaeus’s students and followers, added more
taxonomic ranks, which became like a system
of nesting boxes, each one (as one goes up the
classification) more inclusive than the one before.
Ranks above genus are distinguished by their
endings, and sometimes called the “Higher
Classification.” There are conventions for how
Scientific Names are written, for example the
above | Pierre André Latreille (1762–1833), almost
a victim of the French Revolution, first recognized and
named many of the beetle families that we use today.
opposite | Phylogeny showing a hypothesis of the
relationships for beetle higher groups, adapted from
a study by Chinese and Australian coleopterists in 2018.
Recent technological advances have improved our
ability to study the higher classification of beetles at a
scale and pace not possible previously. A wealth of new
data continue to be incorporated in phylogenetic studies
that test established classifications.