The advent of relational databasing and data storage capacity,
coupled with revolutionary advances in molecular sequencing
technology and specimen imaging, have led to a taxonomic
renaissance. Systema Naturae 250 - The Linnaean Ark maps the
origins of this renaissance, beginning with Linnaeus, through his
"apostles," via the great unsung hero Charles Davies Sherbon
arguably the father of biodiversity informatics up to the present
day with the Planetary Biodiversity Inventories and into the future
with the Encyclopedia of Life and web-based taxonomy.
The book provides scientific, historical, and cultural
documentation of the evolution of taxonomy and the successful
adaptation of the Linnaean nomenclature system to that evolution.
It underscores the importance of taxonomic accuracy, not only for
the classification of living organisms, but for a more complete
understanding of the living world and its biodiversity. The book
also examines the role of technologies such as DNA sequencing,
specimen imaging, and electronic data storage.
A celebration of 250 years of the scientific naming of animals,
Systema Naturae 250 - The Linnaean Ark records and explores the
history of zoological nomenclature and taxonomy, detailing current
and future activity in these fields. Descriptive taxonomy has been
in decline, despite the fact that the classification of organisms
through taxonomic studies provides the foundation of our
understanding of life forms. Packed with illustrations and tables,
this book establishes a vision for the future of descriptive
taxonomy and marks the beginning of a period of rapid growth of
taxonomic knowledge.
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