Science, asked by snuj22, 1 year ago

what is systematics??​

Answers

Answered by imAginary001
2

Answer:

Systematics is the science of naming species and of recovering the relationships between species. In short, systematics describes and analyses Earth's biodiversity. Systematics is a combination of taxonomy and phylogenetic analysis.

Taxonomy is the science of discovering, describing and classifying groups or 'taxa' usually at the species level.

Phylogenetic analysis is the science of recovering the evolutionary relationships, or phylogeny, amongst a group of taxa usually species.

Examining the relationships (or systematics) of species is important, particularly if we are to name species, as we want these groups to reflect the evolution, or phylogeny, of the groups. The aims of a good naming system are that it is explicit (identifies only one group), stable (does not change every time a new study is done), universal (the species name applies everywhere) and evolutionary (the group has arisen from a recent common ancestor).

Answered by GautamSTUDYKING
1

Answer:

It is the study of the diversification of living forms , both past and present and relationship among living things through time.

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