CLASSIFICATION AND NOMENCLATURE. 43 



often assigned the same name to several species. For example, 

 the name C/ict'/ant/ws vestita was given by Bracken ridge to C. 

 gracilUina. Hooker assigned the same name (in part) to C. 

 gracilis, while Swartz assigned the same to the fern described 

 in this volume under the name of C. lanosa. It becomes neces- 

 sary, therefore, in referring to a species to indicate the author 

 of the specific name thus — Cheilanthes vestita Swz. 



1 1 5. Synonymy. — It may also be remarked in this con- 

 nection that different authors have described the same fern 

 under widely different generic and specific names, owing (i) to 

 the different conceptions that have prevailed at different times as 

 to what constituted generic characters, and (2) to ignorance of 

 what others had already written on species, redescribed as new. 

 For example, the delicate Woodsia Ilvensis of Robert Brown was 

 described as Acrostichitm Ilvense by Linnaeus, Polypoditim II- 

 iiense by Swartz, Nephrodiuin rtifidulum by Michaux, Aspidium 

 rufidiilum by Willdenow, and Woodsia rtifidula by Beck. Many 

 other species have been as variously classified. The oppor- 

 tunities for errors of this character are much less now than for- 

 merly, yet redescription is not unknown in our day. 



1 1 6. Species. — Goethe tells us that nature knows only in- 

 dividuals, and that species exist only in the school-books. From 

 this extreme tliere has been every grade of opinion respecting 

 species to the one which regards species as invariable, actual 

 existences, types originally ordained and summoned to existence 

 by the Creator. Linnaeus, for example, defined species in these 

 words : " Species tot sitnt diver see, qiiot diver sas for mas ab initio 

 creavit infinitum ens." "^ Various definitions have been given to 

 species, but none accord with the actual practice of systematists, 

 who seem inclined to make a species what they choose ; and 

 indeed the existence of various connecting forms between 

 many species distinct under normal conditions makes the prac- 

 tical definition of the term almost an impossibility. We may, 

 however, for practical purposes, regard as a species an assem- 

 blage of individuals not differing essentially from each other, 

 and capable of producing like individuals by the ordinary pro- 

 cesses of reproduction. A recent writer defines species as " the 



* There are as many different species as the Infinite Being created in the 

 beginning. 



