scope of systematics
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Answer:
The scope of systematics includes identification, nomenclature and classification of living things to study the relationships among them. Systematic biology includes two major subfields: Phylogenetics : The study of evolutionary relationships among species and higher level taxa.
Systematics and Biodiversity is devoted to whole-organism biology. It is an international, peer-reviewed Life Science journal published online and in print by Taylor & Francis for The Natural History Museum, London. The criterion for publication is scientific merit.
Systematics and Biodiversity aims to document the diversity of all groups of living organisms through systematic papers that have broad context, and that address topical issues relating to biological collections, museum science and the principles and practice of systematics and related fields, including phylogenetics, evolution and conservation. It particularly emphasises the importance and multi-disciplinary significance of systematics and museum science, with contributions that address the implications of other fields on the practice of Systematics and that advance our understanding of other fields through taxonomic knowledge, especially in relation to the nature, origins, and conservation of biodiversity at all taxonomic levels.