"Lucas N. Lerzo (2026)
The lost fossil of the first discovered rebbachisaurid: reassessment of Nopcsaspondylus alarconensis (Diplodocoidea, Sauropoda)
...
The reassessment
of Nopcsaspondylus does not find any diagnostic character which allows
to recognise as a distinct species of rebbachisaurid. In addition, the
erection of Nopcsaspondylus did not follow certain recommendations of
the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN), allowing to
determinate that Nopcsaspondylus represents a nomen dubium"
Now that I have read the paper, Lerzo didn't find any autapomorphies, but he did note a unique combination of characters that distinguishes Nopcsaspondylus-
"It seems to have a well development, as in some of the middle to posterior dorsal vertebrae of the specimen MMCh-PV 49, unlike to the Euro-African rebbachisaurids, such as Nigersaurus, Demandasaurus and Rebbachisaurus, in which the pleurocoel does not occupy most of the lateral surface of the centrum."
"The neural spine is short as in Nigersaurus (pers. observ; Sereno et al., 2007) but different from Rebbachisaurus and the South American rebbachisaurids, such as Limaysaurus, Katepensarus and specimen MMCh-PV 49, where the neural spine is high."
And since both MMCh-PV 49 and Nigersaurus have basically complete dorsal columns (two more anterior dorsals missing in the former) and were both personally examined by Lerzo, we know that there wasn't much positional variation in Nigersaurus' pleurocoel size or MMCh-PV 49's neural spine height. So there you go. Maybe Lerzo's wrong, but his words have Nopcsaspondylus showing a unique combination of characters.
As for being a nomen dubium based on the ICZN, the Code has no bearing on how diagnostic a taxon is. Lerzo's argument instead would seem to be designating Nopcsaspondylus a nomen nudum, but the only parts of the ICZN he argues Apesteguia didn't meet when naming the taxon are Recommendations (73B, 73C[.1, .2 and .10], 73C.6, 73G, 73J) not Articles. They're just best practice, not rules that must be followed for a taxon to be valid.
And for what it's worth (which is very little, since they are not binding rules), I don't think Apesteguia failed 73C.10 ("the geological age and stratigraphical position of the holotype") just because he seems to have gotten it wrong.
Also, Lerzo seems to have misunderstood 73J, which he cites as "The author should also provide a complete list of diagnostic characters" and says "Nevertheless, the diagnosis does not present any autapomorphic traits for this taxon, not even at the time of its original erection." But that's Article 13.1.1 ("be accompanied by a description or definition that states in
words characters that are purported to differentiate the taxon"), and Apesteguia DID provide a three character diagnosis that was supposed to distinguish the taxon, even if Lerzo thinks the characters don't work. 73J actually says "When establishing a new species-group taxon without a
preserved name-bearing type, the author should provide extensive
documentation (e.g., multiple original high-resolution images, DNA
sequences, etc.) of potentially diagnostic characters as completely as
possible", which Apesteguia admittedly did not do (citing Nopcsa's 1902 paper and incorrectly his own Figure 2 which only illustrates another unnamed rebbachisaurid dorsal).
So in conclusion, Nopcsaspondylus is a nomenclaturally valid taxon and seems to possess a unique combination of characters, pending further studies.
Mickey Mortimer