Species numbers are increasing rapidly. This is due mostly to taxonomic inflation, where known subspecies are raised to species as a result in a change in species concept, rather than to new discoveries. Yet macro-ecologists and conservation biologists depend heavily on species lists, treating them as accurate and stable measures of biodiversity. Deciding on a standardized, universal species list might ameliorate the mismatch between taxonomy and the uses to which it is put. However, taxonomic uncertainty is ultimately due to the evolutionary nature of species, and is unlikely to be solved completely by standardization. For the moment, at least, users must acknowledge the limitations of taxonomic species and avoid unrealistic expectations o...
Taxonomy is a scientific discipline that has provided the universal naming and classification system...
Biological sciences have for more than 250 years depended on the nomenclatural system established by...
There is a long tradition of assessing the activity and progress of taxonomy with quantitative indic...
[Extract] Taxonomic inflation, the raising of an organism to a different taxonomic state to exaggera...
Recent criticism by users of mammal taxonomy on current trends in the discipline and in adopted spec...
While greater research on threatened species alone cannot ensure their protection, understanding tax...
Recently, many new (extant) mammal species have been named, mostly by raising subspecies to species ...
Finding a new species is amongst the most impor-tant discoveries a biologist can make (Wilson, 1998)...
Taxonomic stability is essential if the requirements of a host of stakeholders - health professional...
Species lists change for a variety of reasons, including new information and preferences for differe...
Taxonomy and species conservation are often assumed to be completely interdependent activities. How-...
Discontent about changes in species classifications has grown in recent years. Many of these changes...
Revisionary taxonomy is frequently dismissed as merely descriptive, which belies its strong intellec...
Recent commentary by Costello and collaborators on the current state of the global taxonomic enterpr...
Even after more than 250 years of descriptive taxonomy, it is clear that there are many more species...
Taxonomy is a scientific discipline that has provided the universal naming and classification system...
Biological sciences have for more than 250 years depended on the nomenclatural system established by...
There is a long tradition of assessing the activity and progress of taxonomy with quantitative indic...
[Extract] Taxonomic inflation, the raising of an organism to a different taxonomic state to exaggera...
Recent criticism by users of mammal taxonomy on current trends in the discipline and in adopted spec...
While greater research on threatened species alone cannot ensure their protection, understanding tax...
Recently, many new (extant) mammal species have been named, mostly by raising subspecies to species ...
Finding a new species is amongst the most impor-tant discoveries a biologist can make (Wilson, 1998)...
Taxonomic stability is essential if the requirements of a host of stakeholders - health professional...
Species lists change for a variety of reasons, including new information and preferences for differe...
Taxonomy and species conservation are often assumed to be completely interdependent activities. How-...
Discontent about changes in species classifications has grown in recent years. Many of these changes...
Revisionary taxonomy is frequently dismissed as merely descriptive, which belies its strong intellec...
Recent commentary by Costello and collaborators on the current state of the global taxonomic enterpr...
Even after more than 250 years of descriptive taxonomy, it is clear that there are many more species...
Taxonomy is a scientific discipline that has provided the universal naming and classification system...
Biological sciences have for more than 250 years depended on the nomenclatural system established by...
There is a long tradition of assessing the activity and progress of taxonomy with quantitative indic...