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The Encyclopedia of Life (EOL) is a free, online encyclopedia intended to document all of the 1.9 million living species known to science. It aggregates content to form "pages" for every known species. Content is compiled from existing trusted databases which are curated by experts and it calls on the assistance of non-experts throughout the world.
The images of the living OTUs (29 species) were made available in the early 1960s; those of the fossil ones (48 species) later in the decade. These images were copied using xerography . Copies of all OTUs were in the possession of Dr. Paul A. Ehrlich ( Stanford University ), Dr. W. Wayne Moss (Philadelphia Academy of Sciences) and Robert R ...
Over 1.5 million living animal species have been described, of which around 1.05 million are insects, over 85,000 are molluscs, and around 65,000 are vertebrates. It has been estimated there are as many as 7.77 million animal species on Earth. Animal body lengths range from 8.5 μm (0.00033 in) to 33.6 m (110 ft).
Genetics – Science of genes, heredity, and variation in living organisms; Biogeography – Study of distribution of species; Ecological genetics – Study of genetics in natural populations; Evolutionary biology – Study of the evolution of life Evolutionary developmental biology – Comparison of organism developmental processes
Filasterea is a group of 6 amoeboid species belonging to the genera Ministeria, Pigoraptor, [6] Capsaspora, and Txikispora, [12] united by the structure of their thread-like pseudopods. [13] Pluriformea is a provisional name for the clade composed by the two species Corallochytrium limacisporium and Syssomonas multiformis. These organisms have ...
In 2015, the third version of TimeTree was released, with 2,274 studies and 50,632 species, represented in a spiral tree of life, [29] free to download. In 2015, the first draft of the Open Tree of Life was published, in which information from nearly 500 previously published trees was combined into a single online database, free to browse and ...
Carl Linnaeus made the classification "domain" popular in the famous taxonomy system he created in the middle of the eighteenth century. This system was further improved by the studies of Charles Darwin later on but could not classify bacteria easily, as they have very few observable features to compare to the other domains.
Plesiomorphy, symplesiomorphy, apomorphy, and synapomorphy, all mean a trait shared between species because they share an ancestral species. [a] Apomorphic and synapomorphic characteristics convey much information about evolutionary clades and can be used to define taxa. However, plesiomorphic and symplesiomorphic characteristics cannot.