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Firstly, this is amazing material :) Secondly, I like the name 'girus' which still redirects here, but where does the coinage originate? Only one 2009 article in the sources uses the term in its title, though it is quite popular on social media. – SJ +03:13, 8 September 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Only 2 google scholar hits, plus this paper: https://hal.laas.fr/I2M-2014-/hal-02010229 . Discovery/proposal (2019) is in there, for the interested. Maybe it's too new. I'm confused trying to generate reference for this paper, though published in Virology: Current Research, it doesn't seem to have a DOI and I can't find it on the publishers website.
Synonymous save for future cases (WP:CRYSTAL). All the biological commonalities presented in GV article are due to a common descent described by the M taxon. Also, both currently use the same taxobox. Artoria2e5🌉16:21, 20 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
There is a misunderstanding. Megaviricetes is a taxonomic group (class) of viruses. Giant virus is not a taxonomic group, and should not have a taxobox. "Giant viruses" refers to viruses that share certain properties; they also happened to be taxonomically related. A taxon is not synonymous with a biological entity. Curt9901:30, 31 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
"Giant virus is not a taxonomic group,, and should not have a taxobox." - therefore could be part of the Nucleocytoviricota page
" "Giant viruses" refers to viruses that share certain properties; they also happened to be taxonomically related." - They are all part of the same phylum
"A taxon is not synonymous with a biological entity." - at this point it is
All known giant viruses belong to the phylum Nucleocytoviricota.
Respectively, a taxon is not the same thing as an "organism", even though they are often confounded on Wikipedia and in the literature. One can write about the taxonomy of Giant Viruses, but Giant Viruses are not a taxonomic group. Much as cabbage, bears and fish are organisms that have a taxonomic assignment. It may seem pedantic, but it actually is an important distinction. As well, taxonomy changes, such as the relatively newly created Nucleocytoviricota and Megaviricetes; whereas, a Giant Virus, will always be a Giant Virus, and a bear will still be a bear, even if it is decided that the family Ursidae is no longer valid. I hope these words help to clarify that a taxon and a group of biological entities are not the same thing. Curt9903:05, 17 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]