000 01974nam a2200349 a 4500
001 YBT0000000000001014
003 TR-IsYBT
005 20181219212646.0
007 t
008 180728s1994||||xx#|r01###||||#eng u
020 _a0412626209
_q, 0412364409
040 _btur
_erda
_c
041 0 _aeng
082 1 0 _a574.014
_bMI.B
100 1 _aMinelli, Alessandro
245 0 _aBiological systematics :
_bthe state of the art/
_cAlessandro Minelli
250 _aFirst edition
264 1 _aLondon:
_bChapman & Hall,
_c1994
300 _axvi, 387 pages :illustrations ;24 cm
336 _ametin
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _aaracısız
_bn
_2rdamedia
338 _acilt
_bnc
_2rdacarrier
500 _aIncludes bibliographical references and indexes.
520 3 _a1. Systems and classifications. 1.1. Systematics and taxonomy. 1.2. Classification versus system. 1.3. Biological classifications from Andrea Cesalpino to the New Systematics. 1.4. Evolutionary systematics. 1.5. Numerical taxonomy. 1.6. Hennig’s phylogenetic systematics. 1.7. Contrasting systematic schools. 1.8. Towards a natural system of living organisms -- 2. Some steps in comparative biology. 2.1. Characters as ‘symptoms’ for recognizing taxa. 2.2. Characters for choice. 2.3. Homology. 2.4. Homoplasy. 2.5. Character coding. 2.6. Monophyly, paraphyly, polyphyly. 2.7. Determining character polarity. 2.8. Cladograms and trees. 2.9. Numerical methods for the reconstruction of phylogeny. 2.10. Ancestors. 2.11. Fossils and cladistic analysis. 2.12. Grouping and ranking. 2.13. Phylogeny versus adaptation -- 3. Biochemical and molecular systematics. 3.1. Micromolecules. 3.2. Macromolecules -- 4. The species. 4.1. Species concepts. 4.2. Taxonomic diversity within the specie
650 0 _aBiology -- Classification
650 0 _aTaxonomy
902 _a01014
903 _aDoğa Okulu Kütüphanesi
906 _aKitap
908 _aBasılı
909 _aKağıt
999 _c4018
_d4018