4 research outputs found

    Growth of the European taxonomic inventory.

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    <p>Cumulative number of valid species of European terrestrial and freshwater multicellular species since Linnaeus. A: All species. B: Birds, a virtually completely inventoried compartment of European biodiversity. C: Coleoptera, where the number of valid species has steadily increased and shows no sign of levelling. D: Acari, which remained neglected for two centuries, and are now exhibiting a high discovery rate. E: Platyhelminthes, where the impression of a saturated inventory could be due to a current lack of taxonomic workforce. F: Neuropterida orders, for which the rate of description is erratic and reflects bursts of activity by a handful of taxonomists.</p

    Current descriptions of new species in Europe.

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    <p>New species described from Europe in 1998–2007, expressed as percentages of the total of 5,881 species. Taxa representing less than 1% of the total are grouped. For each taxon, the percentages described by non-professional taxonomists (red), professional taxonomists (blue) and taxonomists whose status was unknown (grey) are indicated in histograms. Y-axis range on all histograms is 0–70%.</p

    Growth in European taxonomic inventory summary.

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    <p>Results of the segmented model fitted to the <i>Fauna Europaea</i> dataset: for each historical segment, estimates of the number of new species described per year and 95% confidence interval.</p

    Phylogenomics Resolves The Timing And Pattern Of Insect Evolution: Supplementary File Archives.

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    Phylogenomics Resolves The Timing And Pattern Of Insect Evolution: Supplementary File Archives. This file includes 14 supplementary archives which are in detail described in the README
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