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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Melanie L.J. Stiassny (American Museum of Natural History, NY, USA) , Lynne R. Parenti (National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC, USA) , G. David Johnson (National Museum of Natural History, Washington, DC, USA)Publisher: Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc Imprint: Academic Press Inc Edition: Annotated edition Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 1.500kg ISBN: 9780126709506ISBN 10: 0126709505 Pages: 496 Publication Date: 08 November 1996 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of Contents"An Annotated Bibliography of the Work of Colin Patterson Morphology, Characters and the Interrelationships of Basal Sarcopterygians Phylogenetic Interrelationships of the Living Euselachians (Chondrichthys) Higher-Level Elasmobranch Phylogeny, Basal Squaleans and Paraphyly Interrelationships of the Batoid Fishes (Chondrichthyes:Batoidea) Interrelationships of Basal Neopterygians Interrelationships of Acipenseriformes, With Comments on ""Chondrostei"" Teleostean Monophyly Phylogeny of Osteoglossomorpha Interrelationships of Elopomorph Fishes Clupeomorpha, Sistergroup of Ostariophysi. Interrelationships of Ostariophysan Fishes (Teleostei) Relationships of Lower Euteleostean Fishes Interrelationships of Somiiform Fishes Aulopiform Interrelationships Basal Ctenosquamate Relationships and the Interrelationships Basal Ctenosquamate Relationships and the Interrelationships of the Myctophiform Fishes Phylogenetic Significance of He Pectoral/Pelvic Fin Association in Acanthomorph Fishes: A Reassessment Using Comparative Neuroanatomy"ReviewsFor anyone interested in ichthyology and fish systematics, this book will serve as a key reference, since it provides a comprehensive review of phylogenetic relationships of major groups of fishes. The classifications presented are written by experts in each group, thus providing the most up-to-date thinking on these groups. Well-referenced to the technical literature. Elegantly serves as a starting point for new research studies. Joerg-Henner Lotze in NORTHEASTERN NATURALIST (2001) Anyone needing to understand the evolutionary relationships of fishes will find the information and conclusions in this volume essential. Interpretations may change, but the information presented here will be permanently useful. --SCIENCE (1997) ...a comprehensive overview... The authors are to be congratulated...this book stands as an impressive testament to the exquisite anatomical work of palaeoichthyologists in the past forty years. --Michael J. Benton in JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY (1997) With its wide scope, modern techniques of analysis, new phylogenetic schemes for many groups of fishes, uniform style for most papers, and a number of character lists and matrices... this book will be required reading for all researchers in fish taxonomy and phylogenetics, and will be a valuable addition for all libraries. --R. Hitchin in ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY (1997) The past few decades have been very exciting times in ichthyology, and this book brings that excitement to the reader. Ichthyologists can see the maturity of the field as well as the solid basis for future research... The three editors have done a superb job along with the authors in presenting a new version of the original Interrelationships of Fishes... This book has a very attractive cover and is sturdily bound, well illustrated, and thoroughly edited... The present volume, more comprehensive in its coverage, excels in presenting students, teachers, and advanced researchers with the state of the art in ichthyology... The book should be purchased by university and research museum libraries and will be essential for all scientists who have an interest in fish systematics. --COPEIA (1997) I recommend this book to all who have a serious interest in the interrelationships of fishes, and to those who want to understand just on what modern fish classification is based. --JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY & ECOLOGY This is a book for the advanced... It brings together the contributions of 31 experts to present cutting-edge fish systematics using a phylogenetic approach. If you are seriously interested in what we know--and what we don't know--about how the various groups of fishes are related, this is the book to get... The quality of reproduction of the artwork and photographs is excellent... This is an important book for ichthyologists. It should reset the base point for our understanding of fish interrelationships... This book is excellent. --Ronald M. Coleman in FRESHWATER AND MARINE AQUARIUM Provides state-of-the-art systematics and classification for many of the major groups of fishes, in a phylogenetic framework. --SCI TECH BOOK NEWS The three chapters devoted to elasmobranch fishes pick up where Compagno left off in the original volume, and substantially improve understanding of relationships within this group... a significant advance in our understanding of fish relationships, and a valuable resource for any student of ichthyology. Graduate students, faculty and researchers. --S.G. TOLLEY, University of South Florida This new book makes a substantial contribution to key areas of controversy... Each chapter in this book contains new evidence for fish relationships, presents character data in a manner that provides a clear foundation for future phylogenetic work, and hence marks the most coherent picture of the interrelationship of fishes available to date... This volume provides a clear marker of just how far we've come. --GEORGE V. LAUDER, University of California, Irvine Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |