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11 November 2015 Fishes and Morphology Today: An Introduction
Gloria Arratia, G. David Johnson
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Abstract

Our primary goal in organizing the symposium “Fishes and Morphology Today” (Albuquerque, 14–15 July 2013) and editing these symposium proceedings in Copeia is to showcase the results of current morphological studies and their impact on our understanding of different groups of fishes and their evolutionary history. Morphology remains key to taxonomic, systematic, and evolutionary studies of extant and fossil fishes (and all other organisms) as was convincingly illustrated by contributions on extant and fossil fishes presented in the symposium and now in these symposium proceedings. Here we emphasize and promote the value of morphological research. This effort and others from the worldwide fish community, together with genomic and molecular studies, effectively contribute to the Tree of Life of Fishes and to training programs on biodiversity. Without the underpinnings of a morphological perspective in systematics and evolutionary history, there are few engaging questions to ask. Furthermore, the more we know about the morphology, the more engaging the questions become.

© 2015 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Gloria Arratia and G. David Johnson "Fishes and Morphology Today: An Introduction," Copeia 103(4), 725-726, (11 November 2015). https://doi.org/10.1643/CG-15-314
Published: 11 November 2015
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