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Please contact us if have an event which you wish to promote. If we feel it is appropriate to the Association then it will be listed here. Send details to Dr. Alex Monro Dept. of Botany, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Rd, London SW7 5BD, UK.
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If you would like to organise your own conference, with Systematics Association funding, you need to complete a Conference Proposal form and submit it to Dr. Alex Monro Dept. of Botany, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Rd, London SW7 5BD, UK.
Species for Macroevolution
6pm on Wednesday 7 July 2008, Linnean Society, London
Andy Purvis
Professor of Biodiversity,
Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College, London
Abstract:
Species are fundamental units for evolutionary biology. Alone among the levels of classifications into which we place individuals, the species level has the potential to have an objective reality: when we count them, we think we are counting something meaningful. If we compare number of species in different taxa, regions, or times, we are led to try to understand why the numbers are different or similar. Incomplete knowledge may lead us to use higher taxa, such as genera or families, instead, but we do so in the hope and expectation that they will reflect what good species-level data would show. I will argue: 1. That this hope is misplaced – analysing higher taxa conflates processes that should be kept separate; 2. That analysing temporal patterns in numbers of higher taxa might be particularly problematic when using large, multi-author databases; 3. That even species cannot be used uncritically in macroevolutionary analyses – even with good data (a complete phylogeny of present-day species, or a complete record of fossil species) – but that 4. The best fossil records can let us come close to the ideal species for macroevolution, letting us tackle questions that cannot be addressed any other way.
The meeting is open to visitors
Wine will be served after the lecture to members and guests
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