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Integrated Taxonomy: An Approach to the Organism as a Living System, with Special Reference to Crickets

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

D. K. McE. Kevan
Affiliation:
Macdonald College of McGill University, Montreal, P.Q.
V. R. Vickery
Affiliation:
Macdonald College of McGill University, Montreal, P.Q.
J. E. McFarlane
Affiliation:
Macdonald College of McGill University, Montreal, P.Q.
R. L. Randell
Affiliation:
Macdonald College of McGill University, Montreal, P.Q.

Extract

Integrated taxonomy, as understood by the authors, brings together all available knowledge regarding many aspects of a single group of species so as to form a comprehensive picture of the degree and kind of similarities and differences that are to be found within such a proup. Comparative studies of developmental rates, egg physiology, nutrition, embryology, nymphal development, cytology, and minute anatomy are being applied to three species-complexes of crickets: the Gryllus complex of Sorth America, the Teleogryllus complex of eastern Asia and Australia, and the Acheta complex of North Africa and Southwestern Asia.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1964

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