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Systematics, species concepts, and the evolutionarily significant unit in biodiversity and conservation biology

In J. L. Nielson (ed.), Evolution and the aquatic ecosystem: Defining unique units in population conservation. Special Publication No. 17. American Fisheries Society. pp. 58–113 (1995)

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  1. A hierarchy of species concepts: the denouement in the saga of the species problem.R. L. Mayden - 1997 - In M. F. Claridge, H. A. Dawah & M. R. Wilson (eds.), Species: The units of diversity,. Chapman & Hall. pp. 381–423.
    At least 22 concepts of species are in use today and many of these are notably incompatible in their accounts of biological diversity. Much of the traditional turmoil embodied in the species problem ultimately derives from the packaging of inappropriate criteria for species into a single concept. This results from a traditional conflation of function of concepts with their applications, definitions with concepts, taxonomic categories with groups, and the ontological status of real species with teleological approaches to recover them. Analogous (...)
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