miércoles, 6 de marzo de 2013

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TAXONOMY ETYMOLOGY: TAXO: Arrangements NOMIA: LAW

I-                  WHAT IS THE FUNCTION OF TAXONOMY?

Taxonomy is the classification of organisms in an ordered system that indicates natural relationships

1.      HISTORY

The history of taxonomy dates back to the origin of human language. Western scientific taxonomy started in Greek some hundred years BC and are here divided into prelinnaean and post Linnaean. The most important works are cited and the progress of taxonomy (with the focus on botanical taxonomy) is described up to the era of the Swedish botanist Carl Linnaeus, who founded modern taxonomy. The development after Linnaeus is characterized by a taxonomy that increasingly have come to reflect the paradigm of evolution. The used characters have extended from morphological to molecular. Nomenclatural rules have developed strongly during the 19th and 20th century, and during the last decade traditional nomenclature has been challenged by advocates of the Phylocode.

1.1              Earliest Taxonomy

Taxonomy is as old as the language skill of mankind. When we speak about ancient taxonomy we usually mean the history in the western world. However, the earliest traces are not from the west, but from the east. Shen Nung, Emperor of China around 3000 bc was a legendary emperor known as the Father of Chinese medicine and is believed to have introduced acupuncture. He wanted to educate his people in agriculture and medicine and is said to have tasted hundreds of herbs to test their medicinal value. In the Eastern world, one of the earliest pharmacopoeias was written. Around 1500 BC medicinal plants were illustrated on wall paintings in Egypt. The paintings gives us knowledge about medicinal plants in old  Egypt and their names. In one of the oldest and largest papyrus rolls, Ebers Papyrus, plants are included as medicines for different diseases. They have local

names such as "celery of the hill country" and "celery of the delta", species of Apiaceae that Egyptian doctors had to be able to distinguish in the field. 1.3 The HerbalistsWith the art of book printing in Europe new books could be made in large numbers. This was the time of the different herbals written by herbalists like Brunfels, Bock, Fuchs, Mattioli, Turner, L’Obel,

Gerard, L’Ecluse. We recognize some of these authors in beautiful plants later named by Linnaeus in honour of them: Brunfelsia, Mattiolia, Turnera, Lobelia, Gerardia and Fuchsia. 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. 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. 2.2 Transforming botany and zoology into a science. 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. 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.

3.2. Rules for nomenclature

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.

 

http://atbi.eu/summerschool/files/summerschool/Manktelow_Syllabus.pdf

2.      DEFINITION

Taxonomy is the classification of organisms in an ordered system that indicates natural relationships

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/taxonomy

3.      FUNCTION

The function of taxonomy is to provide a theory for scientists to classify animals and plants of the world.

4.      SCIENTIST INVOLVED

Aristotle (384-322 BC)

Theophrastus (372-287 BC)

Dioscorides (40–90 AD)

Plinius (23–79 AD)

Andrea Cesalpino (1519-1603)

Gaspard Bauhin (1560-1620)

Carl (Carolus) Linnaeus (1707-1778)

 


 

 

 

 
by :valentina molina ,mikayla van denbrenk & paula castellanos & maria isabell ramirez

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