Taxonomy
· Etymology
of Taxo: Arrangments. Nomia: Law
1.-History of Taxonomy?
1.2. The Greeks and Romans
Aristotle (384–322 BC)the Greek philosopher was the first to classify all living things,
like the vertebrates and invertebrates, which he
called animals with blood and without blood (such as insects, crustacea and
testacea (molluscs).
Theophrastus (370–285 BC) was a student of Aristotle
and Platon. He wrote a classification of all known plants, De Historia
Plantarum, which contained 480 species. His classification was based on growth
form, and we still recognise many of his plant genera, like Narcissus, Crocus
and Cornus. This is because Carl Linnaeus accepted many of his generic names.
Dioscorides (40–90 AD) was a greek physician, gathered
knowledge about medicinal plants. Between 50-70 AD he wrote De Materia Medica,
whichcontained around 600 species. The classification in his work is based on
the medicinal properties of the species.
Plinius (23–79 AD) He wrote many books, but the only
one that has survived is his Naturalis Historia, a work of 160 voumes, in which
he described several plants and gave them Latin names.
The Father of Botanical Latin. Plinius died in
Pompeii.
1.3 The Herbalists (Galindo - MIguel Hernandez)
There is usually not much of a classification in the
herbals, and the earliest works were merely copying Theophrastos and
Dioscorides. With time the herbals became more and more original with more
elaborate woodcuts as illustrations.
1.4 Early taxonomists ( Sebastian - Silva)
It was not until the end of the 16th century that
taxonomic works became original enough to replace the ancient Greek works. One
of the reasons for this was the development of optic lenses, whichnmade it
possible to study details in the different species. Collection of specimens
became part of the growing sciences, and the emphasis turned from medical
aspects to taxonomic aspects.
One of the earliest authors was Caesalpino (1519–1603)
in Italy, who is sometimes called "the first taxonomist". In 1583 he
wrote De Plantis, a work that contained 1500 species. His classification was
based on growth habit together with fruit and seed form, as was that of
Theophrastos.
Two Swiss brothers Bauhin (1541–1631; 1560–1624) wrote
the work Pinax Theatri Botanici in 1623.
The word Pinax means register, and the work is a
listing of 6000 species. By this time, species were known with many different
names in different books, and Pinax Theatri Botanici made a welcome order in
the taxonomic world. The Bauhin brothers recognized genera and species as major
taxonomic levels.
The English naturalist John Ray (1627–1705) wrote
several important works through his life. His most important contribution was
the establishment of species as the ultimate unit of taxonomy. In 1682 he
published Methodus Plantarum Nova, which contained around 18 000 plant species,
a result of a relatively narrow species concept. His complicated classification
was based on many combined characters, as opposed to earlier taxonomists. Ray
aimed at publishing a complete system of nature, which included works on
mammals, reptiles, birds, fishes and insects, the latter including pioneering
entomological taxonomic work.
In France Joseph Pitton de Tournefort (1656–1708)
constructed a botanical classification that came to rule in botanical taxonomy
until the time of Carl Linnaeus. In 1700 he published Institutiones Rei
Herbariae, in which around 9000 species were listed in 698 genera. He put
primary emphasis on the classification of genera, and many genera were accepted
by Linnaeus and still in use today.
Tournefort's plant classification was exclusively
based on floral characters. Tournefort's system was the one used by Linnaeus as
a young student, but whereas Tournefort denied the presence of sexuality in
plants, Linnaeus on the contrary based his system on that argument.
2. Linnaean era (Sara - Mikayla)
2.1. Starting point of modern taxonomy
For nomenclatural reasons two works of Carl Linnaeus
(1707–1778, Fig. 4) are regarded as the
starting points of modern botanical and zoological
taxonomy: the global flora Species Plantarum,published in 1753 and the tenth
edition of Systema Naturae in 1758 including global fauna. The reason for this
is that Linnaeus introduced in these books a binary form of species names
called "trivial names" for both plants and animals. For each species
he created an epithet that could be used together with the genus name. The
trivial names were intended for fieldwork and education, and not to replace the
earlier phrase names. The phrase names included a description of the species
that distinguished it from other known species in the genus. With an expanded
knowledge of the global fauna and flora through 17th and 18th century
scientific expeditions, a large number of new species were found and named, and
more terms had to be added to each phrase name. By the time of Linnaeus the
situation was really bad. Linnaeus counted 8530 species of flowering plants in
1753.
The simplicity of Linnaeus' trivial names
revolutionized nomenclature, and soon binary nomenclaturecame to replace the
phrase names. Today, every plant or animal name published before 1753 or 1758,
respectively, is called "prelinnaean" and is thus not valid. Also
early names published by Linnaeus himself are "prelinnaean"!
2.2 Transforming botany and zoology into a science
(Maria Jose - Maria Paula)
Carl Linnaeus started his career by publishing a
system of all living things and minerals in 1735 called Systema Naturae. In
this he introduced the sexual system of plants, an artificial classification
based on the sexual parts of the flower: the stamens and pistils. In a time
when people debated whether plants had sexuality or not, this suggestion from
an unknown person not belonging to any classical European school of natural
sciences more or less shocked the scientific world. However, the practical use
of the system and Linnaeus careful observations persuaded the critics and
Linnaeus sexual system of plants became the highest fashion also outside the
scientific community.
In 1735 he published Critica botanica, with rules for
the formulation of generic names. In the same year came Genera Plantarum with a
list of all known genera. in 1736 and
Philosophia botanica. In 1751 he created rules for species descriptions,
terminology, and even instructions on how to build a proper herbarium cupboard.
Linnaeus established many of the rules taxonomists use today. Terms like
corolla, stamen, filament and anther were created by him, as well as well-known
taxon names like Mammalia.
After a long life with a massive publication in the
philosophy and practicality of systematics, Linnaeus had laid out the
foundation for botany and zoology, and it was now time for subsequent
taxonomists to improve this newborn science.
3. Post-Linnaean taxonomy (Alejandro - Alberto -
Daniel)
3.1. Natural system emerging in France
One of the few countries in which the Linnaean
systematics did not make success was France. The
French stuck to Tournefourt and continued to work on a
development of the natural system. Four
French scientists emerged that made an impact on
future biological sciences.
Georges-Luise Leclerc de Buffon (1707–1788) was a
strong critic to Linnaeus work, and he found it wrong to impose an artificial
order on the disorderly natural world. His approach was to describe the world
rather than to classify it. His theories touched upon development of species,
infraspecific variety and acquired inherited characters in species, which
opened up a pathway for an evolutionary theory. Michel Adanson (1727–1806)
wrote Familles des Plantes already in 1763. He launched the idea that in
classification one should not put greater emphasis on some characters than on
others, but use a great range of characters. He critized Linnaeus' works, and
considered Tournefort's classification far superior.
Antoine Laurent de Jussieu (1748–1836) changed the
system of plants with his Genera Plantarum
in 1789, in which he launched a natural system based
on many characters that came to be a
foundation of modern classification. He divided the
plants into acotyledons, monocotyledons and
dicotyledons and established the family rank in
between the ranks "genus" and "class".
Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck (1744–1829) launched an
evolutionary theory including inheritance of
acquired characters, named the "Lamarckism".
This was foreboding the theory of evolution presented by Charles Darwin and
Alfred Russel Wallace in 1858 in London.
The French scientific work, the development of anatomy
and physiology and improved optical instruments made way for a new era of
taxonomy, which was trying to cope with
an increasing number of species in a rapidly expanding flora and fauna of the
world.
3.2. Rules for nomenclature (Valentina - Paula -
Laura)
One of the first attempts to create rules in botanical
taxonomy was made by Augustin Pyramus de
Candolle (1778–1841) in Théory élémentaire de la botanique in 1813. There he
stated that published names should have priority according to the date of
publication, starting with Linnaeus (withouth mentioning a particular year).
The English did not follow that rule. On a congress in Paris, 100 botanists
adopted the rules in a book by the son Alphons de Candolle (1806–1873), Lois de
nomenclature adoptee from 1867. The rules were thereafter discussed and different
starting points for botanical taxonomy were suggested. During the years 1891 to
1898 the German botanist Otto Kuntze (1843–1907) published the controversial
work Revisio generum Plantarum, in which he applied Candolle's laws from 1867
rigidly. He changed 1000 generic names and 30 000 species names.
Kuntze's strict application of insufficient
nomenclature laws and the nomenclatural mess he made triggered botanists to
create a code of botanical nomenclature. In Europe this was decided on a
botanical congress in Vienna in 1905. During this meeting the starting point
for priority of botanical names was set to 1753, the year of Linnaeus' Species
Plantarum. To stabilize nomenclature after Kuntze's rigid work, a list was made
of well-established names, nomina conservanda, that should be conserved
although they did not have priority, i.e. were not the first names published.
In 1907 American botanists created a code of their own where they introduced
type specimens and allowed tautonyms (identical names in a species name, now
only allowed in zoology, e.g. Grus grus). Not until 1935 did the European and
American codes merge into one international code of botanical nomenclature
(IBCN).
The initiation of a zoological code started somewhat
later. In 1842 a British ornithologist Hugh Edwin Strickland (1811–1853)
elaborated the first nomenclatural laws for zoology, the "Strickland
Code". He was assisted by a committee where Charles Darwin was a member,
among others The Strickland Code was accepted among British and American
zoologists within three years. However, in 1881 a geological international
congress in Bologna modified the code to make it applicable also to fossils.
During the next five years a number of different codes
were suggested by French zoologists,
American ornithologists, German zoologists and English
entomologists, creating an impractical
condition of taxonomic anarchy. The need of an
international code of zoological nomenclature was obvious, and the first was
accepted on an international congress in Moscow in 1892. In 1905, a further
modified international code was published in French, English and German
languages.
There are continuous modifications of the codes of
botanical nomenclature and zoological
nomenclature. Changes in the botanical nomenclature is
decided by discussions and votes on open
meetings at every International Botanical Congress,
held every sixth year. The latest botanical code decided upon in Vienna 2005
opens up for extended possibilities to reject or conserve plant names to
promote nomenclatural stability. Changes in the zoological code are decided
upon by the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature, elected by the
international society of zoologists. The zoological code differs in many ways
from the botanical. Among other things, species do not need to be described in
Latin. Since 1953 there is also an international code of nomenclature for
cultivated plants, and since 1980 there is a code for bacteria (prokaryotes),
excluding the cyanobacteria, which are still included in the botanical code.
3.3 From phenetics to phylogenies (Jhonatan - Mateo)
Charles Darwin (1809–1822) och Alfred Russel Wallace
(1823–1913) launched the evolutionary
theory in 1858. However, this did not affect
systematics in the beginning. Ernst
Haeckel (1834–1919) and August Wilhelm Eichler (1839–18878) were two German
biologists who started the construction of evolutionary trees. Haeckel
established the term "phylogeny". However, the main part of the 20th
century was dominated by extended phenetics, i.e. looking for similarities and
differences to create systematics. Not only gross morphology was used to find
characters, but anatomy, chromosomes, pollen, biochemistry and eventually
proteins. The systems of plants and animals were now huge, in flowering plants
approaching a quarter of a million species. Masters in plant systematics were
Eugen Warming (1841–1924), John Hutchinson (1884–1972), Armen Leonovich
Takhtajan (1910–),Arthur J. Cronquist (1919–1992), Robert F. Thorne (1920–) and
Rolf Dahlgren (1932–1987), each arguing for different systems built up on many
characters, uncertain parts of the system relying onpersonal, professional
experience. It was difficult to test a systematist's theory of a suggested
system.
The German biologist Willi Hennig (1913–1976) founded
the cladistic era in 1966, by stating that only similarities grouping species
(synapomorphies) should be used in
classification, and that taxa should include all descendants from one single
ancestor (the rule of monophyly). Hypothesis on systematics could now be tested
through cladistic methods.
The new method, called cladistics, was controversial,
and it took around 20 years before it started to become established. As earlier
during the century, the reformation of systematics happened earlier among
zoologists than botanists. The 1980's were a decade of great debates and
discussions where scientists claimed themselves to be for or against
cladistics. There was an urgent search for characters in the species analyzed
in order to get phylogenies with high resolutions, a fact that limited the use
of the method. With the invention of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), which
made it economically possible to amplify DNA-sequences for use in systematics,
and the strong development of computer programs that could handle large data
sets, cladistics became more or less the rule for systematic work.
3.4. Phylocode (Gustavo)
With the breakthrough of cladistic analysis and
constructions of phylogenetic hypotheses, the
taxonomy built on the Linnaean hierarchic system
became a matter of intense discussion and
critizism. Two zoologists from USA, Kevin de Queiroz
and Jacques Gauthier, started the discussions in the 1990's and laid the
theoretical foundation to a new nomenclatural code for all organisms, the PhyloCode.
A meeting in Harvard in 1998 drew out the lines for a PhyloCode, and a first
draft was published on the web in 2000.
The PhyloCode reflects a philosophical shift from
naming species and subsequently classifying them (i.e., into higher taxa) to naming
both species and clades. The main idea with the PhyloCode is that only species
and clades should have names, and that all ranks above species are excluded
from nomenclature. The aim is to change current names as little as possible and
to build the stability on clades rather than on ranks.
The PhyloCode is still only a draft, it is
controversial, and has led to a worldwide and very interesting debate. Its
success will depend on the number of taxonomists that will use it for their
taxonomic work.
3. The Herbalists
There is usually not much of a classification in the
herbals, and the earliest works were merely copying Theophrastos and
Dioscorides. With time the herbals became more and more original with more
elaborate woodcuts as illustrations.
4 .Early taxonomists
2.-Definition.
Taxonomy is the science of classificaying and also
naming organism,following some rules developed by Carl Linneus in a
systematical order that indicate a natural relationship dividing in groups or
categories,in a jerarchical order.
3.-Function:Clssify,recognize,categorize
in a jerarchical order the living things in a natural relationship.
4.-Scientist
involved:Shen Nung,Carl Linnaeus,Theophrastus,Pliiun,Discorides, Aristotle.
ALL FOR TAXONOMY:
ALL FOR TAXONOMY:
Bibliography:
·
http://atbi.eu/summerschool/files/summerschool/Manktelow_Syllabus.pdf
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