1st Edition
The New Taxonomy A Science Reimagined
Preface: Mary P. Winsor
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 Introduction: Toward a New Taxonomy: Means, Motives, and Opportunities
Quentin D. Wheeler and David M. Williams
Chapter 2 Norman Platnick, the Development of Cladistics, ‘Integrative’ Taxonomy, and Modern Monography
David M. Williams and Anthony Gill
Chapter 3 Minimalist Species Descriptions: Are They the Answer? And if so, What Was the Question?
Gavin R. Broad
Chapter 4 The Old, the New, and Lots of People: How Taxonomy Will Thrive
Frank-Thorsten Krell
Chapter 5 Databases: Juggling Nomenclature and Taxonomy
Michael D. Guiry
Chapter 6 Zootaxonomy in the Century of Extinctions:
Time for Field Work and Collections
Alain Dubois
Chapter 7 Bringing Taxonomy Back into the Spotlight
Pablo Muñoz-Rodríguez
Chapter 8 Systematics and Biogeography, Ontology, and Vicariance
Visotheary Ung and Anaïs Grand
Chapter 9 Nomenclatural Problems in Zoological Taxonomy
Alain Dubois
Chapter 10 The Survival of Taxonomy and the Digitization of
Natural History Collections
Evgeny Mavrodiev, Manuel B. Crespo, and David M. Williams
Chapter 11 Taxonomy Positive
Michelle J. Price
Chapter 12 A Single Authoritative List of the World’s Species: Background and Road Map
Frank E. Zachos, Stijn Conix, Les Christidis, Aaron M. Lien, and Stephen T. Garnett
Chapter 13 Species Descriptions Go Digital
Peter Uetz and Donat Agosti
Chapter 14 Saving Systematics: Taxonomy’s Identity, Traditions, and Great Expectations
Quentin D. Wheeler
Index
Biography
David M. Williams is a diatom systematist–taxonomist. His research is divided between empirical studies on the systematics and biogeography of diatoms and theoretical studies related to advances in systematic theory, especially as it relates to cladistics. In addition to his work on diatom phylogeny, systematics, and biogeography, he has focused on the role fossils have in determining evolutionary relationships in diatoms.
Quentin D. Wheeler is an insect taxonomist, author, columnist, and podcaster. He was professor of entomology in Cornell University, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in Arizona State University, Keeper and Head of Entomology at the Natural History Museum in London, Director of the Division of Environmental Biology of the U.S. National Science Foundation, and President of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry.






