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Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology is organized to integrate the many fields of specialization which occur in the broad field of biology.[1]

The society was formed in 1902 as the American Society of Zoologists, through the merger of two societies, the "Central Naturalists" and the "American Morphological Society" (founded in 1890).[2] The Ecological Society of America split from it in 1915, and another society of geneticists also split from it in 1930.[1] In 1996 the name was changed to the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology.[1]

The society publishes two scientific journals: the bimonthly journal Integrative and Comparative Biology (formerly the American Zoologist) and Evolution & Development.[3][4] It is organized in a flexible structure with many lightweight divisions.[1] As of 2014, it has approximately 3500 members.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Pennisi, Elizabeth (10 January 2014), "Once failing biology society thrives as it nurtures new disciplines", Science, 343 (6167): 129, doi:10.1126/science.343.6167.129, PMID 24408411.
  2. ^ Quinn, C. Edward (1982), "Ancestry and beginnings: The early history of the American Society of Zoologists", American Zoologist, 22 (4): 735–748, doi:10.1093/icb/22.4.735.
  3. ^ McCain, Katherine W. (April 2010), "Core journal literatures and persistent research themes in an emerging interdisciplinary field: Exploring the literature of evolutionary developmental biology", Journal of Informetrics, 4 (2): 157–165, doi:10.1016/j.joi.2009.11.004.
  4. ^ Schmidt, Diane; Davis, Elisabeth B. (2001), Using The Biological Literature: A Practical Guide, Revised And Expanded, Books in Library and Information Science, vol. 60 (3rd ed.), CRC Press, p. 264, ISBN 9780824741716.
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