What Species Mean: A User's Guide to the Units of Biodiversity

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CRC Press, 29 oct 2018 - 248 páginas

Everyone uses species. All human cultures, whether using science or not, name species. Species are the basic units for science, from ecosystems to model organisms. Yet, there are communication gaps between the scientists who name species, called taxonomists or systematists, and those who use species names—everyone else. This book opens the "black box" of species names, to explain the tricks of the name-makers to the name-users. Species are real, and have macroevolutionary meaning, and it follows that systematists use a broadly macroevolution-oriented approach in describing diversity. But scientific names are used by all areas of science, including many fields such as ecology that focus on timescales more dominated by microevolutionary processes. This book explores why different groups of scientists understand and use the names given to species in very different ways, and the consequences for measuring and understanding biodiversity.

Key selling features:

  • Explains the modern, multi-disciplinary approach to studying species evolution and species discovery, and the role of species names in diverse fields throughout the life sciences
  • Documents the importance and urgent need for high-quality taxonomic work to address today’s most pressing problems
  • Summarises controversies in combining different—sometimes quite different—datasets used to estimate global biodiversity
  • Focusses throughout on a central theme—the disconnect between the makers and the users of names—and seeks to create the rhetorical foundation needed to bridge this disconnect
  • Anticipates the future of taxonomy and its role in studies of global biodiversity
 

Índice

Introduction
1
General Concepts
7
Everyone Uses Species
11
Why Do the Names Keep Changing?
31
Species Are Units of Evolution
53
Natural Patterns in Classification
75
Are Species Real?
101
How to Name a Species
123
Biodiversity and Extinction through Time
147
How Many Species Are There?
171
Dynamic Patterns in Biodiversity
187
Translating Biodiversity across Cultural Barriers
209
Species and Systematics
233
Index
235
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Sobre el autor (2018)

Dr Julia D. Sigwart is the director of the Queen’s University Marine Laboratory, an interdisciplinary institute for marine science in Portaferry, N. Ireland. She completed her undergraduate education at the University of Victoria, and then took up a position on the scientific staff at the American Museum of Natural History. She later moved to Ireland, to manage a research programme linking the National Museum of Ireland (Natural History) and University College Dublin. In 2009, she moved to her faculty position in Queen’s University, Belfast. She has published over 70 papers on diverse topics and organisms. Her research focuses on the evolution of diversity in molluscs and other animal groups, spanning both living and fossil species.

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