Species, Science and Society: The Role of Systematic Biology
This book presents an engaging and accessible examination of the role of systematic biology in species exploration and biodiversity conservation.

Our planet and systematic biology are at a crossroads. Millions of species face an imminent threat of extinction, and, with knowledge of only a fraction of earth’s species we are unprepared to respond. Species, Science and Society explains what is at stake if we continue to ignore the traditional mission of systematics. Rejecting claims that it is too late to document earth’s species, that molecular evidence is sufficient and that comparative morphology and the grand traditions of systematics are outdated, this book makes a compelling argument for a taxonomic renaissance. The book challenges readers to rethink assumptions about systematics. Shattering myths and misconceptions and clarifying the role of systematics in confronting mass extinction, it hopes to inspire a new generation of systematists. Readers are given a deeply personal view of the mission, motivations and rewards of systematic biology. Written in narrative style with passion, wit and optimism, it is the first book to question the growing dominance of molecular data, defend descriptive taxonomy and propose a mission to discover, describe and classify all species. Our evolutionary heritage, the fate of society and the future of the planet depend on what we do next.

This book will be of great interest to academics, researchers and professionals working in systematics, taxonomy and biodiversity conservation, as well as students with a basic background in biology.

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Species, Science and Society: The Role of Systematic Biology
This book presents an engaging and accessible examination of the role of systematic biology in species exploration and biodiversity conservation.

Our planet and systematic biology are at a crossroads. Millions of species face an imminent threat of extinction, and, with knowledge of only a fraction of earth’s species we are unprepared to respond. Species, Science and Society explains what is at stake if we continue to ignore the traditional mission of systematics. Rejecting claims that it is too late to document earth’s species, that molecular evidence is sufficient and that comparative morphology and the grand traditions of systematics are outdated, this book makes a compelling argument for a taxonomic renaissance. The book challenges readers to rethink assumptions about systematics. Shattering myths and misconceptions and clarifying the role of systematics in confronting mass extinction, it hopes to inspire a new generation of systematists. Readers are given a deeply personal view of the mission, motivations and rewards of systematic biology. Written in narrative style with passion, wit and optimism, it is the first book to question the growing dominance of molecular data, defend descriptive taxonomy and propose a mission to discover, describe and classify all species. Our evolutionary heritage, the fate of society and the future of the planet depend on what we do next.

This book will be of great interest to academics, researchers and professionals working in systematics, taxonomy and biodiversity conservation, as well as students with a basic background in biology.

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Species, Science and Society: The Role of Systematic Biology

Species, Science and Society: The Role of Systematic Biology

by Quentin Wheeler
Species, Science and Society: The Role of Systematic Biology

Species, Science and Society: The Role of Systematic Biology

by Quentin Wheeler

Hardcover

$180.00 
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Overview

This book presents an engaging and accessible examination of the role of systematic biology in species exploration and biodiversity conservation.

Our planet and systematic biology are at a crossroads. Millions of species face an imminent threat of extinction, and, with knowledge of only a fraction of earth’s species we are unprepared to respond. Species, Science and Society explains what is at stake if we continue to ignore the traditional mission of systematics. Rejecting claims that it is too late to document earth’s species, that molecular evidence is sufficient and that comparative morphology and the grand traditions of systematics are outdated, this book makes a compelling argument for a taxonomic renaissance. The book challenges readers to rethink assumptions about systematics. Shattering myths and misconceptions and clarifying the role of systematics in confronting mass extinction, it hopes to inspire a new generation of systematists. Readers are given a deeply personal view of the mission, motivations and rewards of systematic biology. Written in narrative style with passion, wit and optimism, it is the first book to question the growing dominance of molecular data, defend descriptive taxonomy and propose a mission to discover, describe and classify all species. Our evolutionary heritage, the fate of society and the future of the planet depend on what we do next.

This book will be of great interest to academics, researchers and professionals working in systematics, taxonomy and biodiversity conservation, as well as students with a basic background in biology.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032484396
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 07/06/2023
Series: Routledge Studies in Conservation and the Environment
Pages: 266
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Quentin Wheeler was President of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, Vice President and Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in Arizona State University, Keeper and Head of Entomology in the Natural History Museum, London, Director of the Division of Environmental Biology at the National Science Foundation, and Professor of Insect Systematics in Cornell University, U.S.A. He produces a weekly podcast and newsletter, The Species Hall of Fame, and his previous books include The Future of Phylogenetic Systematics (2016), The New Taxonomy (2008), Letters to Linnaeus (2009), What on Earth?—100 of Our Planet’s Most Amazing New Species (2013), Species Concepts and Phylogenetic Theory—A Debate (2000), Extinction and Phylogeny (1992) and Fungus-Insect Relationships (1984).

Table of Contents

Part I — Overview

  1. A Little about Molecules
  2. Scientific Malpractice
  3. The Science of Species
  4. The Art of Survival
  5. Cosmology of the Life Sciences
  6. Choices
  7. Everything You Always Wanted to Know about Taxonomy but Were Afraid to Ask
  8. A Science Misunderstood Greatly
  9. The Species-Scape
  10. The Illusion of Knowledge
  11. Morphology without Apology
  12. The Inventory Imperative
  13. Other than That, Mrs. Lincoln, How Was the Play?
  14. Part II — A Crisis of Crises

  15. Extinction
  16. Systematics under Siege
  17. The Nature Gap
  18. Options for a Sustainable Future
  19. Part III — Solutions

  20. Taxonomic Renaissance
  21. A Planetary-Scale Species Inventory
  22. Hall of the Holocene
  23. Shameless Self-Promotion
  24. The Evolution of Evolutionary Economics
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