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tassonomie

Tassonomie, commonly rendered as taxonomy in English, is the branch of biology that concerns the naming, description, and classification of organisms. It provides a universal framework for identifying organisms and for organizing biodiversity into a hierarchical system of categories. The basic ranks are domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, and species, though many systems use additional categories such as sub- and super- ranks. A central practice is binomial nomenclature, in which each species is given a two-part Latin name consisting of its genus and species epithet.

Historically, taxonomy emerged from natural history and was systematized by Carl Linnaeus in the 18th century,

Today, taxonomy relies on morphological traits, ecological information, and increasingly molecular data from DNA and RNA

who
introduced
the
hierarchical
classification
and
the
binomial
naming
convention.
Over
time,
the
field
broadened
to
systematics,
which
seeks
to
infer
evolutionary
relationships.
With
Darwin’s
theory
of
evolution
and
later
developments
in
phylogenetics,
modern
taxonomy
aims
to
reflect
evolutionary
history
rather
than
just
similarity
of
appearance.
sequencing.
Methods
such
as
phylogenetic
inference
and
cladistics
are
used
to
propose
monophyletic
groups.
Taxonomic
work
is
dynamic;
species
concepts,
discovery
of
cryptic
species,
and
revision
of
names
are
common
as
new
data
emerge.
Names
and
classifications
are
governed
by
international
codes
to
ensure
nomenclatural
stability.