Science, asked by Anonymous, 9 months ago

systematics and new systematics​

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Answered by lisa5791
9

Answer:

In contrast classical systematics is based on the study of mainly morphological traits of one or a few specimens with supporting evidences from other fields. New systematics is also called population systematics and biosystematics. It strives to bring out evolutionary relationships amongst organisms

Answered by shubhamkr5923
3

Answer:

What is new systematics?

NEW SYSTEMATICS (NEO-SYSTEMATICS, BIO-SYSTEMATICS)  It is a concept of systematics that considers a species to the product of evolution. It takes into consideration all the known characteristics of organisms and all the known evidence from different fields of biology

Who proposed Systematics?

Carl Linnæus

Carl Linnæus- Systematics as Scientia

Carl Linnæus (1707-1778) was a Swedish botanist, zoologist, and physician regarded in modern science as the 'father of taxonomy'. Why is this? Well, he was the first to consistently use a system of classification (taxonomy) to categorize organisms based on shared features

What are the two goals of systematics?

The goals of systematics include assigning names to organisms using binomial nomenclature and organizing or classifying species into larger groups that have a biological meaning

In contrast classical systematics is based on the study of mainly morphological traits of one or a few specimens with supporting evidences from other fields. New systematics is also called population systematics and biosystematics. It strives to bring out evolutionary relationships amongst organisms.

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