Word Net
zoological adj1 concerning the study of animals and their
classification and properties; "zoological research"
2 of or relating to animals or animal groups;
"zoological garden"
Moby Thesaurus
animal, animalian, animalic, animalistic, beastlike, beastly, bestial, brutal, brute, brutelike, brutish, dumb, entomologic, instinctive, instinctual, mindless, nonrational, subhuman, taxidermal, zoic, zooidal, zoologicEnglish
Translations
of, or relating to animals
- Finnish: eläintieteellinen
- German: zoologisch
- Hungarian: állati, állat-
of, or relating to zoology
- Finnish: eläintieteellinen
- German: zoologisch
- Hungarian: állattani, zoológiai
- ttbc French: zoologique
Zoology (from Greek
ζῴον, zoon, "animal" + λόγος, "logos", "knowledge") is the
biological discipline
which involves the study of animals.
Name
The pronunciation of "zoology" is /zoʊˈɑləʤɪ/; however, an alternative pronunciation is /zuˈɑləʤɪ/. Traditionally (and more properly), the word was pronounced with the first syllable rhyming with "toe", followed by "-ology". Recently, it has become more common to pronounce the first syllable as "zoo". The word zoology originates from the Greek zoion, meaning animal, and logos, meaning study.Subfields of zoology
The study of animal life is, of course, ancient:
but as 'zoology' it is relatively modern, for what we call biology
was known as 'natural
history' at the start of the nineteenth century. During the
lifetime of Charles
Darwin, natural history turned from a gentlemanly pursuit to a
modern scientific activity. Zoology as we know it was first
established in German and British universities. The institution of
zoology training in British universities was mainly established by
Thomas
Henry Huxley. His ideas were centered on the morphology
of animals: he was himself the greatest comparative anatomist of
the second half of the nineteenth century. His courses were
composed of lectures and laboratory practical classes; and his
system became widely spread.
There was much left out by Huxley, especially the
study of animals in their environment, which had been the main
stimulus for both Darwin and Alfred
Wallace (who both came up with the idea of natural
selection). The fact that neither Darwin nor Wallace ever held
a university teaching post may have contributed to this rather
startling omission. Gradually Huxley's comparative
anatomy was supplemented by other much-needed methods. The
field of zoology in the twentieth century mainly comprised these
approaches:
- Comparative anatomy studies the structure of animals.
- The physiology of animals is studied under various fields including anatomy and embryology
- The common genetic and developmental mechanisms of animals and plants is studied in molecular biology, molecular genetics and developmental biology
- Ethology is the study of animal behavior.
- The ecology of animals is covered under behavioral ecology and other fields
- Evolutionary biology of both animals and plants is considered in the articles on evolution, population genetics, heredity, variation, Mendelism, reproduction.
- Systematics, cladistics, phylogenetics, phylogeography, biogeography and taxonomy classify and group species via common descent and regional associations.
- The various taxonomically-oriented disciplines such as mammalogy, herpetology, ornithology identify and classify species, and study the structures and mechanisms specific to those groups. Entomology is the study of insects, by far the largest group of animals.
- Palaeontology, including all that may be learnt of ancient environments.
Systems of classification
Morphography includes the systematic exploration and tabulation of the facts involved in the recognition of all the recent and extinct kinds of animals and their distribution in space and time. (1) The museum-makers of old days and their modern representatives the curators and describers of zoological collections, (2) early explorers and modern naturalist travelers and writers on zoo-geography, and (3) collectors of fossils and palaeontologists are the chief varieties of zoological workers coming under this heading. Gradually, since the time of Hunter and Cuvier, anatomical study has associated itself with the more superficial morphography until today no one considers a study of animal form of any value which does not include internal structure, histology and embryology in its scope.The real dawn of zoology after the legendary
period of the Middle Ages
is connected with the name of an Englishman,
Edward
Edward Wotton, born at Oxford in 1492, who
practised as a physician in London and died in
1555. He published a treatise De
differentiis animalium at Paris in 1552. In
many respects Wotton was simply an exponent of Aristotle, whose
teaching, - with various fanciful additions, constituted the real
basis of zoological knowledge throughout the Middle Ages. It was
Wotton's merit that he rejected the legendary and fantastic
accretions, and returned to Aristotle and the observation of
nature.
The most ready means of noting the progress of
zoology during the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries is to compare
Aristotle's classificatory conceptions of successive.
Notable zoologists
In alphabetical order by surname:- Louis Agassiz (malacology, ichthyology)
- Aristotle
- David Attenborough
- Henry Walter Bates (Batesian mimicry, Amazon)
- Pierre Joseph Bonnaterre
- William H. Cade (Evolution of insect mating behavior)
- Rachel Carson (marine biologist)
- Archie Carr (Herpetology, esp. sea turtles)
- Archie Carr III, (wild mammals)
- Eugenie Clark (Ichthyology)
- Jeff Corwin (herpetology)
- Emmet Kinsella (Sexuality of Dolphins)
- Georges Cuvier (founder of comparative morphology)
- Charles Darwin (theory of evolution, natural selection)
- Richard Dawkins (ethology, evolutionary biology)
- James R. Dixon (Herpetology)
- George A. Feldhamer (mammalogy)
- William Flower (mammals)
- Edmund Brisco Ford (ecological genetics)
- Dian Fossey (primatology)
- Birutė Galdikas (primatology)
- Jane Goodall (primatology)
- Harry W. Greene (Herpetology)
- Arthur Davis Hasler (limnology, ichthyology, salmon homing)
- Victor Hensen (planktology)
- Bernard Heuvelmans (cryptozoology)
- Julian Huxley (evolutionary synthesis, humanism, World Wildlife Fund, UNESCO)
- Thomas Henry Huxley (evolution, agnosticism, science education)
- Libbie Hyman (invertebrate zoology)
- Steve Irwin (herpetology)
- William Kirby (father of entomology)
- Hans-Wilhelm Koepcke (ornithology, herpetology)
- E. Ray Lankester (zoology and comparative anatomy)
- Carolus Linnaeus (father of systematics)
- Konrad Lorenz (ethology)
- David W. Macdonald (wild mammals)
- John Maynard Smith (evolutionary biology, genetics)
- Ernst Mayr (evolutionary biology)
- Montgomery Montgomery (Herpetology)
- Fritz Müller (evolutionary biology, Müllerian mimicry, Brazil)
- Desmond Morris (ethology)
- Ron Nowak (wild mammals)
- Richard Owen (vertebrate palaeontology, dinosaurs, Natural History Museum)
- Roger Tory Peterson (ornithology)
- Eric Pianka (herpetologist)
- William Emerson Ritter (marine biology)
- Thomas Say (entomology)
- Shen Kuo (medieval Chinese zoologist)
- Su Song (medieval Chinese zoologist)
- Jakob van Uexküll (animal behavior, invertebrate zoology)
- Ernest P. Walker (wild mammals)
- Alfred Russel Wallace (natural selection, zoogeography, animal colouration, Amazon, East Indies)
- John Werler (Herpetology)
- E.O. Wilson (entomology, especially ants, founder of sociobiology)
- Robert Broom
- Austin Stevens (herpetology, especially snakes and other serpents.
See also
- Zoological distribution
- Zootomy - the study of animal anatomy or animal dissection
- Cryptozoology - the pseudoscientific study of hidden or unknown animals
- Paleontology - the study life in the past
- Oceanography - the study of the oceans
- Entomology - the area of biology that studies insects
- Botany - the area of biology that studies plants
- Microtomy
- List of zoologists
- Important Publications in Zoology
- Anthrozoology
- Animals in Buddhism
- Islam and animals
- Timeline of zoology
Sources and external links
References
zoological in Afrikaans: Dierkunde
zoological in Arabic: علم الحيوان
zoological in Aragonese: Zoolochía
zoological in Franco-Provençal: Zoologia
zoological in Bengali: প্রাণিবিজ্ঞান
zoological in Bosnian: Zoologija
zoological in Breton: Loenoniezh
zoological in Bulgarian: Зоология
zoological in Catalan: Zoologia
zoological in Czech: Zoologie
zoological in Welsh: Sŵoleg
zoological in Danish: Zoologi
zoological in German: Zoologie
zoological in Estonian: Zooloogia
zoological in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ζωολογία
zoological in Spanish: Zoología
zoological in Esperanto: Zoologio
zoological in Basque: Zoologia
zoological in Persian: جانورشناسی
zoological in French: Zoologie
zoological in Western Frisian: Soölogy
zoological in Friulian: Zoologjie
zoological in Irish: Zó-eolaíocht
zoological in Galician: Zooloxía
zoological in Korean: 동물학
zoological in Hindi: प्राणी विज्ञान
zoological in Upper Sorbian: Zoologija
zoological in Croatian: Zoologija
zoological in Ido: Zoologio
zoological in Indonesian: Zoologi
zoological in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Zoologia
zoological in Interlingue: Zoologie
zoological in Ossetian: Зоологи
zoological in Icelandic: Dýrafræði
zoological in Italian: Zoologia
zoological in Hebrew: זואולוגיה
zoological in Javanese: Zoologi
zoological in Kannada: ಪ್ರಾಣಿಶಾಸ್ತ್ರ
zoological in Georgian: ზოოლოგია
zoological in Kurdish: Zoolojî
zoological in Ladino: Zoolojia
zoological in Latin: Zoologia
zoological in Latvian: Zooloģija
zoological in Luxembourgish: Zoologie
zoological in Lithuanian: Zoologija
zoological in Hungarian: Zoológia
zoological in Macedonian: Зоологија
zoological in Malay (macrolanguage):
Zoologi
zoological in Dutch: Zoölogie
zoological in Japanese: 動物学
zoological in Norwegian: Zoologi
zoological in Norwegian Nynorsk: Zoologi
zoological in Narom: Zoologie
zoological in Occitan (post 1500):
Zoologia
zoological in Low German: Zoologie
zoological in Polish: Zoologia
zoological in Portuguese: Zoologia
zoological in Romanian: Zoologie
zoological in Quechua: Suwuluhiya
zoological in Russian: Зоология
zoological in Scots: Zoology
zoological in Albanian: Zoologjia
zoological in Sicilian: Zuoluggìa
zoological in Simple English: Zoology
zoological in Slovak: Zoológia
zoological in Slovenian: Zoologija
zoological in Serbian: Зоологија
zoological in Serbo-Croatian: Zoologija
zoological in Finnish: Eläintiede
zoological in Swedish: Zoologi
zoological in Tamil: விலங்கியல்
zoological in Tetum: Zoolojia
zoological in Thai: สัตววิทยา
zoological in Vietnamese: Động vật học
zoological in Tajik: Зоология
zoological in Turkish: Zooloji
zoological in Ukrainian: Зоологія
zoological in Urdu: حیوانیات
zoological in Volapük: Nimav
zoological in Yiddish: זאאלאגיע
zoological in Contenese: 動物學
zoological in Chinese:
动物学