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  2. Taxonomy (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxonomy_(biology)

    Systematics: "The study of the identification, taxonomy, and nomenclature of organisms, including the classification of living things with regard to their natural relationships and the study of variation and the evolution of taxa". In 1970, Michener et al. defined "systematic biology" and "taxonomy" in relation to one another as follows: [10]

  3. Taxonomic rank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxonomic_rank

    Cladistics is a method of classification of life forms according to the proportion of characteristics that they have in common (called synapomorphies). It is assumed that the higher the proportion of characteristics that two organisms share, the more recently they both came from a common ancestor.

  4. Kingdom (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_(biology)

    The classification of living things into animals and plants is an ancient one. Aristotle (384–322 BC) classified animal species in his History of Animals, while his pupil Theophrastus (c. 371 –c. 287 BC) wrote a parallel work, the Historia Plantarum, on plants. [7]

  5. Phylum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylum

    The term phylum was coined in 1866 by Ernst Haeckel from the Greek phylon (φῦλον, "race, stock"), related to phyle (φυλή, "tribe, clan"). [4] [5] Haeckel noted that species constantly evolved into new species that seemed to retain few consistent features among themselves and therefore few features that distinguished them as a group ("a self-contained unity"): "perhaps such a real and ...

  6. Animal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal

    Animals have structural characteristics that set them apart from all other living things: cells surrounded by an extracellular matrix [19] composed of collagen [20] [21] and; elastic glycoproteins [19] [22] motility [23] i.e. able to spontaneously move their bodies during at least part of their life cycle. a blastula stage during embryonic ...

  7. Caminalcules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caminalcules

    The images of the living OTUs (29 species) were made available in the early 1960s; those of the fossil ones (48 species) later in the decade. These images were copied using xerography . Copies of all OTUs were in the possession of Dr. Paul A. Ehrlich ( Stanford University ), Dr. W. Wayne Moss (Philadelphia Academy of Sciences) and Robert R ...

  8. Order (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_(biology)

    In biological classification, the order is a taxonomic rank used in the classification of organisms and recognized by the nomenclature codes. An immediately higher rank, superorder, is sometimes added directly above order, with suborder directly beneath order. An order can also be defined as a group of related families.

  9. Cavalier-Smith's system of classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavalier-Smith's_system_of...

    In his 2003 classification scheme, Cavalier-Smith reassigned Amoebozoa to the unikont clade along with animals, fungi, and the protozoan phylum Choanozoa. Plants and all other protists were assigned to the clade Bikont by Cavalier-Smith. [43] Cavalier-Smith's 2003 classification scheme: Unikonts protozoan phylum Amoebozoa (ancestrally uniciliate)