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Page "Binomial nomenclature" ¶ 27
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zoological and code
Together, these two parts are referred to as a " species name " or " binomen " in the zoological code ; or " species name ", " specific name ", or a " binary combination " in the botanical code.
This customs code encompasses “ zoological, botanical, mineralogical or anatomical collections or items in such collections .”
The first botanical code was produced in 1905, the zoological code in 1889 and cultivated plant code in 1953.
If the section is raised in rank to become the genus Falcataria, the correct name cannot be Falcataria falcataria, as might be expected, since under the botanical code ( but not the zoological code ) names with the same word as both the genus and the specific epithet ( tautonyms ) are forbidden.

zoological and ICZN
* ICZN website, for zoological nomenclature
Schodde and Mason in their zoological catalogue of Australian birds however chose Spilopelia based on 24 ( b ) of the ICZN Code.

zoological and ),
Gardening also takes place in non-residential green areas, such as parks, public or semi-public gardens ( botanical gardens or zoological gardens ), amusement and amusement parks, along transportation corridors, and around tourist attractions and garden hotels.
A gardener Gardening also takes place in non-residential green areas, such as parks, public or semi-public gardens ( botanical gardens or zoological gardens ), amusement and theme parks, along transportation corridors, and around tourist attractions and hotels.
* the infusoria ( protists in modern zoological classification ), in 1674
However, the term is widely used in studies of zoological populations ( veterinary epidemiology ), although the term " epizoology " is available, and it has also been applied to studies of plant populations ( botanical or plant disease epidemiology ).
* Edward Duyker Citizen Labillardière: A Naturalist ’ s Life in Revolution and Exploration ( 1755 — 1834 ), Miegunyah / Melbourne University Press, Melbourne, 2003, ISBN 0-522-85010-3, Paperback reprint, 2004, ISBN 0-522-85160-6, pp. 383 ( including notes, glossaries, zoological, botanical and general index ), 12 maps, 18 black and white plates New South Wales Premier ’ s General History Prize, 2004.
* Joseph Smit ( 1836-1929 ), zoological illustrator
: Other examples for sometimes well known plant names with zoological equivalents are Aotus ( Fabaceae and Mammalia ), Arenaria ( Caryophyllaeceae and Aves ), Betula ( Betulaceae and Hymenoptera ), Chloris ( Cactaceae and Aves ), Dugesia ( Asteraceae and Plathelminthes ), Erica ( Ericaceae and Araneae ), Hystrix ( Poaceae and Mammalia ), Iris ( Asparagales and Orthoptera ), Liparis ( Orchidaceae and Actinopterygii ), Phalaenopsis ( Asparagales and Aves ), Pinus ( Pinaceae and Mollusca ), Prunella ( Lamiaceae and Aves ), Ricinus ( Fabaceae and Acari ), Taxus ( Taxaceae and Mammalia ), Typha ( Typhaceae and Porifera ), Ulva ( Ulvophyceae and Lepidoptera ), Viola ( Violaceae and Lepidoptera ).
* In his honor the Karl Ritter von Frisch Medal of the German Zoological Society ( Deutschen Zoologischen Gesellschaft, DZG ), is awarded every two years to scientists whose work is distinguished by extraordinary zoological achievements which represent an integration of insights from several different biological disciplines.

zoological and second
He finished his zoological studies in 1933 and received his second doctorate ( PhD ).
By 1852 there were over 74, 000 zoological and geological specimens at the museum, and in Britain the natural history collection was second only to that of the British Museum.
It is named after Charles Darwin, who carried out a zoological survey of the Falkland Islands on the Beagle's second voyage.

zoological and part
A part of Kopački Rit has been designated as a special zoological reserve.
However, he maintains a distinction between world-historical peoples, and ahistorical peoples — the former will have a historical destiny as part of a high Culture, the latter will have a merely zoological fate.
The American association has developed a definition for zoological gardens and aquariums as part of its accreditation standards: " A permanent cultural institution which owns and maintains captive wild animals that represent more than a token collection and, under the direction of a professional staff, provides its collection with appropriate care and exhibits them in an aesthetic manner to the public on a regularly scheduled basis.
Menetries was in charge of the zoological part.
In the latter part of 1832, he returned to Germany with significant zoological and botanical collections.
In 1953 he would take part in a zoological expedition to India.
In 1860 he gave over the physiological part of his teaching to a new chair, retaining the zoological, with which his career had begun.

zoological and name
The species name troglodytes, Greek for " cave-dweller ", was coined by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach in his book De generis humani varietate nativa liber (" on the natural varieties of the human genus ") published in 1776, This book was based on his dissertation presented one year before ( it had a date 16 Sep 1775 printed on its title page ) to the University of Göttingen for internal use only, thus the dissertation did not meet the conditions for published work in the sense of zoological nomenclature.
In other words, the act of publishing a new zoological name thereby automatically and simultaneously establishes all the corresponding names in the relevant other ranks, with the same type.
This is one of the rare cases where a zoological species does not have a stable specific name and a unique species-author-year combination, it can have two names at the same time.
It would seem that this faith gained ground rapidly because the name Moloch reminded them of the zoological " molche " or the German " Molch ," the terms for Newt.
In zoological nomenclature when a species is split into subspecies, the originally described population is retained as the " nominotypical subspecies " or " nominate subspecies ", which repeats the same name as the species.
Until it receives a new name, zoological nomenclature requires the inverted commas.
Through the book title Brehms Tierleben, which he co-authored with Eduard Pechuël-Loesche, Wilhelm Haacke, and Richard Schmidtlein, his name became a household word for popular zoological literature.
( Technically, because the quagga was described first as E. quagga, the proper zoological name for the most common form of the plains zebra is E. quagga burchelli.
* eponym: a botanical, zoological, artwork, or place name that derives from a real or legendary person ; a name for a real or hypothetical person from whom a botanical, geographical, artwork or zoological name is derived ; a person after whom a medical condition is named, or the condition so named.
It is phonetically similar to the Greek decaocto (" eighteen "), to which the bird owes its zoological name.
The term " type species " is regulated in zoological nomenclature by article 42. 3 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, which defines a type species as the name-bearing type of the name of a genus or subgenus ( a " genus-group name ") is the " type species ".
Hence, Scopus as established by Brisson is indeed the valid generic name of the hammerkop, and the first valid use of Scops was in 1772 by Brünnich-which according to modern rules of zoological nomenclature was unjustified however, as the name he believed to be reinstating had never been technically valid in the first place.
( 1959 ): A note on the correct zoological name of the Indian Little Green Heron ( Aves, Ardeidae ).

zoological and is
* In a zoological context, a spine is a hard, needle-like anatomical structure.
* A zoological garden, or zoo for short, is a place where wild animals are cared for and exhibited to the public.
* Museum of Science and Technology ( it is constituted by many collections located in several university faculties: mineralogical, botanic, Entomological, zoological, anatomical collection " Luigi Rolando ", physics and agronomic collection )
Although it draws heavily on symbiosis ideas first put forward by mid-19th century scientists and by Merezhkovsky ( 1905 ) and Ivan Wallin ( 1920 ) in the early-20th century, Margulis's endosymbiotic theory formulation is the first to rely on direct microbiological observations ( as opposed to paleontological or zoological observations which were previously the norm for new works in evolutionary biology ).
She also believed that proponents of the standard theory " wallow in their zoological, capitalistic, competitive, cost-benefit interpretation of Darwin – having mistaken him ... Neo-Darwinism, which insists on slow accrual of mutations by gene-level natural selection, is in a complete funk.
Botanical medicine prescribed by an inyanga or herbal healer is generally known as muti, but the term muti also applies to other traditional medical formulations, including those that are zoological or mineral in composition.
The last quagga has been stuffed and is now on display at the zoological museum at Artis.
The Code deals with zoological nomenclature, which is defined in the Glossary as
It is certainly the most important principle and the fundamental guiding precept that preserves the stability of zoological nomenclature.
Type species are very important, and there is no general zoological database that has recorded the type species for all genera.
Osijek is also home to one of the few Croatian zoological gardens, along the Drava river.
The head of the Parks Department, Dwight Davis, voiced his opinion against Forest Park — that is, until the city set aside in the park in which to establish a zoological park.
In scientific classification of biota, a subphylum is a taxonomic rank in zoological nomenclature.
The taxonomic rank of ' subdivision ' in fungi and plant taxonomy is equivalent to ' subphylum ' in zoological taxonomy.
The term is widely replaced by author in zoological nomenclature, but is still in use in botany.
The very common suffix-idae is normally appended to zoological family names and is derived from the Greek suffix-ιδαι /- idai, which indicates a plural noun.

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