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  • Animal Health@
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    See Also:

    Sites:
  • Anemaw: A look at the ways animals use electromagnetism, luminescence and infrasonic as well as ultrasonic waves.
  • Animal Diversity Web: Online database of animal history, distribution, classification and conservation biology provided by the University of Michigan.
  • Bioluminescence: Fundamentals and current research about the science of marine bioluminescence.
  • Biosis: Guide to internet resources and other related life sciences of interest to zoologists.
  • Listen To Nature: Contains hundreds of wildlife sounds recorded from all over the world, including reptiles, mammals and insects. Features an illustrated introduction to bird communication.
  • Marine Biology: Information about various species of marine life (mainly fish and mammals), conservation, research and news.
  • Marine Organisms: Marine biology research center in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Includes organism index, articles, essays and images.
  • Olejar's Encyclopedia of Animals: Includes a searchable encyclopedia of facts concerning a broad range of Animalia.
  • Online Zoologists: Interests and avocations of the two men. Data for marine species, computational and evolutionary biology and evolutionary computation.


     from Wikipedia

    Zoology

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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    Part of a Series on

    Zoology


    Branches of Zoology

    Anthrozoology · Apiology
    Arachnology · Cetology
    Conchology · Entomology
    Ethology · Herpetology
    Ichthyology · Malacology
    Mammalogy · Myrmecology
    Neuroethology · Ornithology
    Planktology · Paleozoology
    Primatology

    Notable Zoologists

    Georges Cuvier · Charles Darwin
    William Kirby · Carolus Linnaeus
    Konrad Lorenz · Thomas Say
    Alfred Russel Wallace · more...

    History

    pre-Darwin

    post-Darwin

    This box: view  talk  edit

    Zoology (from Greek: ζῴον, zoion, "animal"; and λόγος, logos, "knowledge") is the biological discipline which involves the study of animals.

    Name

    The pronunciation of "zoology" is /zoʊˈɑləʤɪ/; however, an alternative pronunciation is /zuˈɑləʤɪ/[1]. Traditionally (and more properly), the word was pronounced with the first syllable rhyming with "toe", followed by "-ology". Recently, it has become more common to pronounce the first syllable as "zoo". The word zoology originates from the Greek zoion, meaning animal, and logos, meaning word.

    Subfields of zoology

    The study of animal life is, of course, ancient: but as 'zoology' it is relatively modern, for what we call biology was known as 'natural history' at the start of the nineteenth century. During the lifetime of Charles Darwin natural history turned from a gentlemanly pursuit to a modern scientific activity. Zoology as we know it was first established in German and British universities. Originally quite closely connected to medical training, it gradually gained its own identity as Darwin started to answer those fundamental historical questions which had been asked before him without much success. The institution of zoology training in British universities was mainly established by Thomas Henry Huxley. His ideas were centered on the morphology of animals: he was himself the greatest comparative anatomist of the second half of the nineteenth century. His courses were composed of lectures and laboratory practical classes; and his system became widely spread.

    There was much left out by Huxley, especially the study of animals in their environment, which had been the main stimulus for both Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace (who both came up with the idea of natural selection). The fact that neither Darwin nor Wallace ever held a university teaching post may have contributed to this rather startling omission. Gradually Huxley's comparative anatomy was supplemented by other much-needed methods. The field of zoology in the twentieth century mainly comprised these approaches:

    1. Comparative anatomy studies the structure of animals.
    2. The physiology of animals is studied under various fields including anatomy and embryology
    3. The common genetic and developmental mechanisms of animals and plants is studied in molecular biology, molecular genetics and developmental biology
    4. Ethology is the study of animal behaviour.
    5. The ecology of animals is covered under behavioral ecology and other fields
    6. Evolutionary biology of both animals and plants is considered in the articles on evolution, population genetics, heredity, variation, Mendelism, reproduction.
    7. Systematics, cladistics, phylogenetics, phylogeography, biogeography and taxonomy classify and group species via common descent and regional associations.
    8. The various taxonomically-oriented disciplines such as mammalogy, herpetology, ornithology identify and classify species, and study the structures and mechanisms specific to those groups. Entomology is the study of insects, by far the largest group of animals.
    9. Palaeontology, including all that may be learnt of ancient environments.

    Systems of classification

    Morphography includes the systematic exploration and tabulation of the facts involved in the recognition of all the recent and extinct kinds of animals and their distribution in space and time. (1) The museum-makers of old days and their modern representatives the curators and describers of zoological collections, (2) early explorers and modern naturalist travellers and writers on zoo-geography, and (3) collectors of fossils and palaeontologists are the chief varieties of zoological workers coming under this heading. Gradually, since the time of Hunter and Cuvier, anatomical study has associated itself with the more superficial morphography until today no one considers a study of animal form of any value which does not include internal structure, histology and embryology in its scope.

    The real dawn of zoology after the legendary period of the Middle Ages is connected with the name of an Englishman, Edward Edward Wotton, born at Oxford in 1492, who practised as a physician in London and died in 1555. He published a treatise De differentiis animalium at Paris in 1552. In many respects Wotton was simply an exponent of Aristotle, whose teaching, - with various fanciful additions, constituted the real basis of zoological knowledge throughout the Middle Ages. It was Wotton's merit that he rejected the legendary and fantastic accretions, and returned to Aristotle and the observation of nature.

    The most ready means of noting the progress of zoology during the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries is to compare Aristotle's classificatory conceptions of successive.

    History

    Notable zoologists

    Main article: List of zoologists

    In alphabetical order by surname:

    See also

    Sources and external links

    Wikibooks
    Wikibooks has more on the topic of
    Wikiversity
    At Wikiversity you can learn more and teach others about Zoology at:


    References

    1. ^ Zoology. Dictionary.com. Retrieved on 26 April, 2007.

    This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.


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