PřF:Bi0260 Taxonomy - Course Information
Bi0260 Taxonomy and zoological nomenclature
Faculty of ScienceSpring 2011
- Extent and Intensity
- 2/0/0. 2 credit(s) (plus extra credits for completion). Type of Completion: zk (examination).
- Teacher(s)
- Mgr. Igor Malenovský, Ph.D. (lecturer), prof. RNDr. Jaromír Vaňhara, CSc. (deputy)
RNDr. Andrea Špalek Tóthová, Ph.D. (lecturer)
Mgr. Petr Kment (lecturer), prof. RNDr. Jaromír Vaňhara, CSc. (deputy) - Guaranteed by
- prof. RNDr. Jaromír Vaňhara, CSc.
Department of Botany and Zoology – Biology Section – Faculty of Science
Contact Person: prof. RNDr. Jaromír Vaňhara, CSc. - Prerequisites (in Czech)
- Bi1030 Syst. & evol. of invertebrates && Bi2090 System evolution vertebrates
- Course Enrolment Limitations
- The course is also offered to the students of the fields other than those the course is directly associated with.
- fields of study / plans the course is directly associated with
- Biology - Museology (programme PřF, M-BI, specialization Zoology)
- Systematic Biology and Ecology (programme PřF, M-BI, specialization Systematic Zoology and Ecology)
- Systematic Biology and Ecology (programme PřF, N-BI, specialization Systematic Zoology and Ecology)
- Course objectives
- Main objectives can be summarized as follows: An introduction to the terminology and methods of biological systematics and taxonomy. Special attention is paid to the methods of phylogeny reconstruction, natural classification and rules of zoological nomenclature. Examples and the chapter on nomenclature are primarily aimed at students of systematic zoology, interested students of other branches of biology are however welcome.
- Syllabus
- 1. Systematics, taxonomy and a brief review on their history. 2. Taxon, category, species concept, character, intraspecific variation. 3. Phenetics, review and use of statistics in contemporary taxonomy. Taxonomic character from the viewpoint of statistics, traditional and geometric morfometrics, cluster analyses, ordinations, discriminant analysis, artificial neural networks, automatic species identification. 4. Introduction into cladistics: similarity and relationship, homology, syn)apomorphy, (sym)plesiomorphy, determination of character polarity, principle of maximum parsimony, hypothesis in systematics. 5. Quantitative cladistics: character coding, cladogram construction, character optimization and weighting, tree statistics, consensus, cladistic software. 6. Methods of molecular taxonomy and phylogenetics: proteins, nucleic acids and their extraction, PCR, DNA cloning and sequencing, DNA hybridisation, RAPD, restriction analyses, microsatelites, DNA barcoding. 7. Reconstruction of phylogeny using molecular data: alignment, maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, Bayesian analysis, distance methods. 8. Practical use of molecular methods in taxonomy: visit of a laboratory. 9. Advantages and limits of molecular and morphological data, sources of error and conflict, integration of different types of data into a phylogenetic analysis. Applications of phylogenetic analysis: classification, historical biogeography, tests of coevolution and evolutionary scenarios. 10. International code of zoological nomeclature: basic principles, availability, validity and formation of names. 11. International code of zoological nomeclature 2: homonymy and synonymy, principle of priority versus stability, type concept in nomenclature, summary and model examples. 12. Work with taxonomic material and literature: collections, taxonomic revision, description of new taxa, identification keys, biodiversity databases, electronic taxonomy.
- Literature
- DROZD, Pavel. Principy systematiky a taxonomie. Vyd. 1. Ostrava: Ostravská univerzita, 2004, 89 s. ISBN 807042995X. info
- FLEGR, Jaroslav. Evoluční biologie. Vyd. 1. Praha: Academia, 2005, 559 s. ISBN 8020012702. info
- Mezinárodní pravidla zoologické nomenklatury : přijaté Mezinárodní unií biologických věd. Translated by Václav Houša - Pavel Štys. 4. vyd. Praha: Česká společnost entomologická, 2003, 8, xxxi. ISBN 8023915398. info
- SCHUH, Randall T. Biological Systematics. Priciples and Applications. 1st ed. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2000, 239 pp. ISBN 0-8014-3675-3. info
- KITSCHING, Jan J. and Peter L. et al. FOREY. Cladistics. The theory and practice of parsimony analysis. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998, 228 pp. ISBN 0 19 850138 2. info
- Zima J., Macholán M., Munclinger P., Piálek J. Genetické metody v zoologii. Univerzita Karlova v Praze, Karolinum, Praha, 239s, 2004 ISBN 80-246-0795-6.
- ŽUROVEC, Michal. Molekulární biologie živočichů. Vyd. 1. České Budějovice: Jihočeská univerzita, 1999, 312 s. ISBN 8070403330. info
- MARHOLD, Karol and Jan SUDA. Statistické zpracování mnohorozměrných dat v taxonomii : (fenetické metody). 1. vyd. Praha: Karolinum, 2002, 159 s. ISBN 8024604388. info
- WINSTON, Judith E. Describing species : practical taxonomic procedure for biologists. New York, N.Y.: Columbia University Press, 1999, xx, 518. ISBN 0231068247. info
- Wägele, Johann-Wolfgang: Foundations of phylogenetic systematics. Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil, München, 2005. 365 s. ISBN 3-89937-056-2.
- Teaching methods
- Lectures, class discussion, visit of a laboratory of molecular taxonomy, visit of museum collections.
- Assessment methods
- Written test.
- Language of instruction
- Czech
- Further Comments
- Study Materials
The course is taught annually.
The course is taught: every week.
- Enrolment Statistics (Spring 2011, recent)
- Permalink: https://is.muni.cz/course/sci/spring2011/Bi0260