The New TaxonomyQuentin D. Wheeler Finalist for 2009 The Council on Botanical & Horticultural Libraries Literature Award!A Fresh Look at Taxonomy The most fundamental of all biological sciences, taxonomy underpins any long term strategies for reconstructing the great tree of life or salvaging as much biodiversity as possible. Yet we are still unable to say with any certainty how |
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Page viii
... Hennig's phylogenetic systematics–must be rejoined if we are to learn enough about our world's diversity to understand its evolution and functions and if we are to pass a legacy of specimens and knowledge on to future generations. Hennig's ...
... Hennig's phylogenetic systematics–must be rejoined if we are to learn enough about our world's diversity to understand its evolution and functions and if we are to pass a legacy of specimens and knowledge on to future generations. Hennig's ...
Page 2
... Hennig, 1966; Nelson and Platnick, 1981). Mayr's 1942 Systematics and the Origin of Species succeeded in further confounding these incompatible approaches, effectively diminishing the stature of taxonomy and higher level phylogeny study ...
... Hennig, 1966; Nelson and Platnick, 1981). Mayr's 1942 Systematics and the Origin of Species succeeded in further confounding these incompatible approaches, effectively diminishing the stature of taxonomy and higher level phylogeny study ...
Page 3
... Hennig, 1966; Nelson and Platnick, 1981; Schoch, 1986; Schuh, 2000)–taxonomy's losses in this unstable mixture were inevitable and might have been foreseen. That the pendulum would swing so far to the experimental side that taxonomy ...
... Hennig, 1966; Nelson and Platnick, 1981; Schoch, 1986; Schuh, 2000)–taxonomy's losses in this unstable mixture were inevitable and might have been foreseen. That the pendulum would swing so far to the experimental side that taxonomy ...
Page 6
... Hennig (1966), carried on: If in this struggle for survival biological systematics has recently lost ground to other and, as is often heard, younger and more modern disciplines, this is not so much because of the limited practical or ...
... Hennig (1966), carried on: If in this struggle for survival biological systematics has recently lost ground to other and, as is often heard, younger and more modern disciplines, this is not so much because of the limited practical or ...
Page 7
... Hennig's ideas received wide attention sooner. Hennig had worked on his theories at the same time that the New Systematics was diverting attention away from the core questions of systematics. They did not have much international impact ...
... Hennig's ideas received wide attention sooner. Hennig had worked on his theories at the same time that the New Systematics was diverting attention away from the core questions of systematics. They did not have much international impact ...
Contents
1 | |
Chapter 2 Networks and Their Role in eTaxonomy | 19 |
Chapter 3 Taxonomy as a Team Sport | 33 |
Chapter 4 Planetary Biodiversity Inventories as Models for the New Taxonomy | 55 |
Chapter 5 On the Use of Taxonomic Concepts in Support of Biodiversity Research and Taxonomy | 63 |
The Role of the Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF | 87 |
Opportunities and Challenges | 95 |
ICZN ZooBank and the New Taxonomy | 129 |
ThreeDimensional Specimen Ordination and Recognition | 143 |
Chapter 10 Taxonomic Shock and Awe | 211 |
Index | 227 |
Systematics Association Publications | 239 |
Back cover | 245 |
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Common terms and phrases
Astarte automated big science biodiversity biologists Bookstein Brentidae catfishes CBOL cent characters Cladistics cladograms classification collections concept approach concept relationships Curculionidae data-set databases descriptions Dicranum fuscescens Diptera diversity DNA barcoding DNA sequences DNA taxonomy Ecology Edited eigenshape eigensurface analysis Evolution evolutionary Figure funding GBIF GenBank genetic genome geometric global Godfray grid Hebert Hennig ICZN identification images infrastructure institutions Internet Journal Knapp landmark Linnaean names MacLeod Meier mitochondrial molecular morphological morphometric museum mutabilis Network nomenclature obliquata omalii onomy outline phenetic Philosophical Transactions Phylocode phylogenetic phylogeny Platnick point clouds problems Procrustes publication registration relative warps represent Royal Society sample scans scientific semilandmarks shape coordinates shape variation Society of London species boundaries species concept specimens surface Systematic Biology systematists taxa taxon taxonomic concepts taxonomic research taxonomists taxonomy three-dimensional tion training set users virginicus virtual Wheeler ZooBank Zoological
Popular passages
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