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         Taxonomy:     more books (100)
  1. Principles of Angiosperm Taxonomy by P. H. Davis, 1991-09
  2. Books a la Carte Plus for Microbiology with Diseases by Taxonomy (2nd Edition) by Robert W. Bauman, 2006-01-20
  3. Biogeography and Taxonomy of Honeybees by Friedrich Ruttner, 1987-12-10
  4. Taxonomy and Plant Conservation
  5. The Poverty of the Linnaean Hierarchy: A Philosophical Study of Biological Taxonomy (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and Biology) by Marc Ereshefsky, 2007-08-06
  6. Organizational Systematics-Taxonomy, Evolution, Classification by Bill McKelvey, 1982-11
  7. Pathogenic Fungi: Structural Biology and Taxonomy
  8. Animal Taxonomy (Studies in Biology) by H.E. Goto, 1982-10-01
  9. Versatile Berkeley botanist: plant taxonomy and university governance, oral history transcript by Lincoln Constance, William Bache Fretter, et all 2010-09-10
  10. Palaemonid Prawns: Biodiversity, Taxonomy, Biology and Management by K. V. Jayachandran, 2001-08
  11. Taxonomies of the School Library Media Program by David V. Loertscher, 2000-01-01
  12. Chemical Fungal Taxonomy by Frisvad, 1998-06-01
  13. Microbiology with Diseases by Taxonomy Value Pack (includes Current Issues in Microbiology, Volume 2 & Current Issues in Microbiology, Volume 1) by Robert W. Bauman, 2008-02-08
  14. CourseCompass Student Access Kit for Microbiology with Diseases by Taxonomy by Robert W. Bauman, 2010-04-23

81. Aquatic And Wetland Plant Forum
A forum for the discussion of current ideas and problems relating to the ecology, conservation, identification and taxonomy of wetland plants.
http://www.ardeola.demon.co.uk/

82. Primate Taxonomy
Primate taxonomy. Taxonomies attempt to group species into broader categories( taxa, sing. taxon) on the basis of substantial similarities
http://www.umanitoba.ca/anthropology/courses/121/primatology/taxonomy.html
Primate Taxonomy
Taxonomies attempt to group species into broader categories ( taxa , sing. taxon ) on the basis of substantial similarities and inferred descent from common ancestors. The primate order is divisible into numerous biological taxa on several levels. There are several possible taxonomical systems, and these have changed over time. The following classification is a simplified version of the most widely used system.
Order Sub Order Infra Order Super Family Family Common Term Primates Prosimii Loris
Lemur
Tarsier Anthropoidea Platyrrhini New World Monkeys Catarrhini Cercopithecoidea Old World Monkeys Hominoidea Hylobatidae Gibbons Simangs Pongidae Orangutans
Gorillas
Chimpanzees
Bonobos Hominidae Humans Note:
Updated: October 1998

83. Index Nominum Genericorum (ING)
A collaborative project of the International Association for Plant taxonomy and the Smithsonian Institution, providing a compilation of generic names published for all organisms covered by the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.
http://rathbun.si.edu/botany/ing/
The Index Nominum Genericorum ING ), a collaborative project of the International Association for Plant Taxonomy (IAPT) and the Smithsonian Institution, was initiated in 1954 as a compilation of generic names published for all organisms covered by the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature . We are pleased to offer a way to search the ING database . We hope that those needing access to information about generic names of plants will use the index and will advise us of potential additions and corrections. Ellen Farr and Gea Zijlstra, Editors
farr.ellen@nmnh.si.edu

Introduction
The original intent of the ING was to bring all generic names of plants together in a single list to reveal homonymy between groups. In addition, ING includes bibliographic citations and information about the typification and nomenclatural status of generic names. The index was first published on sets of printed cards and then in book form in 1979 (Farr et al., 1979). A supplement was also published (Farr et al., 1986). While a second supplement is planned, we recognize that hard copy is immediately out of date, and for users with access to the Internet we believe that the World Wide Web offers promise as a useful platform for a collaborative project such as this. Current work on the ING is supported by the Smithsonian Institution, IAPT, and the University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands. The content of the database was developed over a 40-year period by the efforts of more than 100

84. Primate Taxonomy
Please go to Primate Variations taxonomy to view the updated material. The followingmaterial is retained for reference purposes only. Primate Taxomony.
http://www.umanitoba.ca/anthropology/courses/121/taxonomy.html
Notice! This taxomony and the files formerly linked from it have been substantially revised and placed in a new directory. Please go to Primate Variations: Taxonomy to view the updated material. The following material is retained for reference purposes only.
Primate Taxomony
Primates are divisible into numerous biological taxa on several levels. There are several possible taxonomical systems, and these have changed over time. The following classification is a simplified version of Jolly and White, 1995, Physical Anthropology and Archaeology, Fifth Edition. (This version makes a radical departure from previous standards by placing chimpanzees and gorillas in the same family as humans (Hominidae). Older versions placed only humans in this taxon and refer to any human fossil forms as hominid to mark their distinct evolutionary direction. Jolly and White substitute the term hominin to indicate an exclusively human direction.) Note: Taxa which include the human species appear in light blue shaded boxes

85. Survey Of The Plant Kingdoms
Explores plant anatomy, taxonomy, and classification, from Monera through the higher plants. Includes descriptions as well as graphics and schematics.
http://web1.manhattan.edu/fcardill/plants/intro/

86. Educational Psychology Interactive: The Cognitive Domain
Bloom et al.'s taxonomy of the Cognitive Domain. The taxonomy is presentedbelow with sample verbs and a sample behavior statement for each level.
http://chiron.valdosta.edu/whuitt/col/cogsys/bloom.html
Bloom et al.'s Taxonomy of the Cognitive Domain
Developed by: W. Huitt
Last Modified: July 2000 Overview of the Cognitive System Educational Psychology Interactive Beginning in 1948, a group of educators undertook the task of classifying education goals and objectives. The intent was to develop a classification system for three domains: the cognitive, the affective, and the psychomotor. Work on the cognitive domain was completed in 1956 and is commonly referred to as Bloom's Taxonomy of the Cognitive Domain although the full title was Taxonomy of educational objectives: The classification of educational goals. Handbook I: Cognitive domain with the text having 4 other authors (M. Englehart, E. Furst, W. Hill, and D Krathwohl). The major idea of the taxonomy is that what educators want students to know (encompased in statements of educational objectives ) can be arranged in a hierarchy from less to more complex. The taxonomy is presented below with sample verbs and a sample behavior statement for each level. LEVEL DEFINITION SAMPLE
VERBS SAMPLE
BEHAVIORS
KNOWLEDGE Student recalls or
recognizes information

87. ASPT Homepage
Promotes research and teaching in the taxonomy, systematics, and phylogeny of vascular and nonvascular plants.
http://www.sysbot.org/
This a 'non-frames' version of the ASPT homepage that will load into 'frames-challenged' web browsers. Please follow the links below to explore ASPT webspace. While we try to update links on this page, some might not be as current as those available via the 'frames' version of the ASPT system. Thus, please consider an upgraded version of your current browsing software (see download links below) Comments? Development of ASPT WWW pages will involve features available through the most current 'WWW browser' software. Both and Internet Explorer are free for educational use. Created on: 6 May 1996 , last update - 18 June 1999

88. Virus Taxonomy
Microbiology Immunology BS3035 Virus taxonomy, Updated January2, 2003, Search. Virus taxonomy. The information in this document
http://www-micro.msb.le.ac.uk/335/VirusGroups.html
: Virus taxonomy Search
Virus Taxonomy
The information in this document is drawn from: Virus Taxonomy: Seventh Report of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses
H.V. Van Regenmortel, D.H.L. Bishop, M. H. Van Regenmortel, Claude M. Fauquet (Eds) More than 1,550 virus species belonging to 3 orders, 56 families, 9 subfamilies and 233 genera are recognized in this report. Amazon.co.UK
Orthography: ("spelling conventions")
  • The names of virus orders, families, subfamilies, genera and species should be written in italics with the first letter capitalized. Other words are not capitalized unless they are proper nouns, e.g. Tobacco mosaic virus, Poliovirus, Murray River encephalitis virus. This format should only be used when official taxonomic entities are referred to - it is not possible to centrifuge the species Poliovirus for example, but it is possible to centrifuge poliovirus. Italics and capitalization are not used for vernacular forms (e.g. rhinoviruses, c.f. the genus Rhinovirus)

89. DINOBASE, Dinomenu
Dinosaur species, taxonomy, references, and pictures.
http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/dinobase/dinomenu.html
Welcome to the dinosaur database at University of Bristol
Sorry! Your browser can't display our frame-based dinosaur database!

90. Everett Talavera`s Aplocheilus Lineatus Web Page
taxonomy, breeding, natural history, and care of the Aplochelius Lineatus.
http://mx.geocities.com/mexfishweb/page.html
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

91. Biology 211: Taxonomy Of Flowering Plants
An introduction to the principles and practice of flowering planttaxonomy. Emphasis is placed on acquiring the facility to use
http://www.colby.edu/info.tech/BI211/Bio211.html
An introduction to the principles and practice of flowering plant taxonomy. Emphasis is placed on acquiring the facility to use appropriate terminology in order to identify plants, as well as understanding the historical context and investigative procedures of taxonomists in designing a classification. Of particular importance is gaining an understanding of the philosophical bases in taxonomy and the relevance of this field to other areas of biology. Course
Objectives:
  • Learn vegetative and reproductive features and terminology that are useful in the identification of flowering plants. Gain ability to use published keys for the identification of flowering plants. Learn to recognize some of the common and unusual families of flowering plants in Maine. Understand the principles of plant taxonomy, including evolutionary trends, patterns of speciation, biogeography, and floral biology. Gain an understanding of the relationships between evolutionary mechanisms, evolutionary history, and the classification of organisms. Develop an ability to critically examine the extent to which a classification system reflects relationships between organisms.

92. Feature-Practical Taxonomies
Examines the use and implementation of taxonomies to organize organizational knowledge and data.
http://www.phys.uni.torun.pl/~duch/ref/s-search/taxonomy/featureb1.htm
January 1999
Practical Taxonomies
Hard-won wisdom for creating a workable knowledge classification system
-By Sarah L. Roberts-Witt The only thing harder than finding any particular item of information may be finding it again. As organizations and individuals struggle over the intractable problem of data smog, the issue isn't so much acquiring the information in the first place, but remembering just where it was left. The solution is a knowledge classification system-including a taxonomy structure for navigating the system-that categorizes all the information the organization chooses to track in a logical manner so that it can be reliably accessed by anyone in the organization. Sounds easy, right? Just ask Yahoo! The opening page of Yahoo! provides an entrĀŽe to one of the largest, most familiar and most frequently accessed knowledge classification systems in the world, fronted by a basic but highly usable taxonomy. "We continually revisit and re-evaluate the directory structure to make sure it still works for the people who use it," said Srinija Srinivasan, Yahoo!'s editor-in-chief. "We are all about determining which differences we can carve out, as well as defining which similarities are meaningful." When it comes to creating a knowledge-classification system, it is fair to say that the majority of organizations don't face the challenges Yahoo! does in terms of information volume. Conversely, most organizations don't have the luxury of attacking the problem with an army of human indexers and editors. But there is a common thread-the need to tame the seemingly endless influx of data in a way that is usable, effective and simple.

93. Biology 211: Flowering Plant Taxonomy

http://www.colby.edu/info.tech/BI211/
Click Here to Proceed
Click Here to Proceed

94. Growing Squash And Pumpkins In The Home Garden, HYG-1620-93
Gives information on history and taxonomy, climate, fertilizer and lime, culture, insects and diseases, pollination, harvesting, storage, and varieties.
http://www.ag.ohio-state.edu/~ohioline/hyg-fact/1000/1620.html
Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet
Horticulture and Crop Science
2021 Coffey Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43210-1086
Growing Squash and Pumpkins in the Home Garden
HYG-1620-93
Ted W. Gastier
History and Taxonomy
Squash and pumpkins will be discussed together because their cultural requirements are similar and because of the great confusion in differentiating between the two. There is also confusion about the origin of pumpkins and squash. T.W. Whitaker and G.W. Bohn presented evidence in 1950 that five species of Cucurbita, that are known as pumpkins and squash, originated in the Americas. Whitaker and Bohn also defined the terms pumpkin, summer squash, and winter squash as follows: Pumpkin -the edible fruit of any species of Cucurbita, used when ripe as a table vegetable or in pies; flesh is somewhat coarse and/or strongly flavored, hence is not generally served as a baked vegetable. Summer Squash -The edible fruit of any species of Cucurbita, commonly C. pepo , used when immature as a table vegetable. Winter Squash -The edible fruit of any species of Cucurbita used when ripe as a table vegetable or in pies; flesh is usually fine-grained and of mild flavor, hence is suitable for baking.

95. Wiley-VCH - Journal Of Basic Microbiology
The journal publishes results of fundamental research on procariotic and eucariotic microorganisms. Particular consideration is given to papers dealing with general aspects of microbial physiology, biochemistry, cytology, genetics, ecology, taxonomy, virology and biotechnology.
http://www.wiley-vch.de/publish/en/journals/alphabeticIndex/2248
Journals Journals from A to Z Journal of Basic Microbiology Books Journals Please specify Architecture Business Chemistry Civil Engineering Computer Science Earth Science Education Electrical Engineering Geography Graphics Design History Industrial Engin. Life Sciences Materials Science Mathematics Mechanical Engin. Medical Sciences Physics Social Science Statistics Journals from
A to Z
Online Submission
of Manuscripts
... Electronic Media Please specify Accounting Architecture Business Chemistry Civil Engineering Computer Certification Computer Science Earth Science Economics Education Electrical Engineering End-User Computing Finance Geography Graphics Design History Hospitality Industrial Engin. Law Life Sciences Materials Science Mathematics Mechanical Engin. Medical Sciences Physics Psychology Social Science Statistics Journal of Basic Microbiology
Latest Issue Journal of Basic Microbiology publishes results of fundamental research on prokaryotic and eucharyotic microorganisms. Particular consideration is given to papers dealing with general aspects of microbial physiology, biochemistry, cytology, genetics, ecology, taxonomy, virology and biotechnology. Original papers, short communications and review articles on relevant problems in microbiology as well as book reviews are presented.

96. Virus Taxonomy Online

http://www.virustaxonomyonline.com/

97. ISO/IEC TR 10000-31998
Information technology Framework and taxonomy of International Standardized Profiles Part 3 Principles and taxonomy for Open System Environment Profiles 2nd edition ZIP File.
http://www.iso.ch/iso/en/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/c030727e.zip

98. Primate Taxonomy
AskPrimate Index PIN Home Resources In Primatology About the Primates taxonomy Primate taxonomy. Are Flying Foxes Really Primates?
http://www.primate.wisc.edu/pin/taxon.html
[What's New] [Search] [IDP] [WDP] ... About the Primates > Taxonomy
Primate Taxonomy
URL: http://www.primate.wisc.edu/pin/taxon.html
Page last modified: November 20, 2002
Maintained by the WPRC Library PIN Home Search PIN

99. Welcome To The California Academy Of Sciences Library
Subject strengths include systematics and taxonomy, evolutionary biology, biodiversity, biogeography, local and regional natural sciences and natural history.
http://www.calacademy.org/research/library/
Collections Contact the Library Services Electronic Resources ... Computer Use Policy Quick Links Catalogs
Academy

MELVYL
**Zoological Record Electronic Journals ... Ask a Reference Librarian!
**Available for internal Academy use only Hours:
Academy Library

Monday-Friday
Biodiversity Center
Monday-Sunday
California Academy of Sciences Library
What's new at the Library? The Academy Library, founded in 1853, is a research library devoted to natural history and the natural sciences. Subject strengths include:
* Systematics and Taxonomy * Evolutionary Biology
* Biodiversity * Biogeography
* Local and Regional Natural Sciences and Natural History The link located below will allow you to access the Academy's catalog through telnet. Once you are in telnet click on "Connect" and scroll down to sfpl.lib.ca.us. When you are asked for your user name enter caspac Telnet
(requires NCSA Telnet application California Academy of Sciences Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, California

100. NRCS Soil Survey Site Moved
Keys to Soil taxonomy. by Soil Survey Staff Newest version of Keys to Soiltaxonomy, Eighth Edition, 1998 is now available online in PDF format.
http://www.statlab.iastate.edu/soils/keytax/content.html
The NRCS Soil Survey web site has been moved to: http://soils.usda.gov/ Please update your bookmarks and links as necessary. Wait and you will be forwarded to the homepage of the new site.

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