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Zoology

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A beautiful butterfly perched on a flower, showcasing nature's colorful insects.

Zoology is the scientific study of animals. It looks at many parts of animal life, such as their bodies, how they grow, how they are grouped, their habits, and where they live. Zoologists study animals that are alive today and those that lived long ago and are now extinct. They also learn how animals fit into their homes and ecosystems.

The study of animals goes back a long way. Even ancient people were interested in the animals around them and used this knowledge to care for certain species. The formal study of zoology began with the famous thinker Aristotle, who looked at animals and how their bodies changed over time.

As time passed, many great scientists helped shape modern zoology. During the Renaissance and later, scientists like Carl Linnaeus, Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, Robert Hooke, Charles Darwin, and Gregor Mendel made important discoveries that changed how we understand animals. Today, zoology includes many areas of study, such as how animals are grouped, how their bodies work, their biochemistry, and how they change over time through evolution.

With the discovery of the structure of DNA in 1953 by Francis Crick, James Watson, and Rosalind Franklin, new ways to study animals were found. This led to big advances in understanding cells, how animals develop, and the genetics of animals. All of these studies help us learn more about the amazing variety of life on our planet.

History

Main articles: History of zoology through 1859 and History of zoology (1859–present)

Conrad Gessner (1516–1565). His Historiae animalium is considered the beginning of modern zoology.

For a chronological guide, see Timeline of zoology.

The history of zoology shows how humans have studied animals for a very long time. Early people looked at animals to help them survive, even making cave paintings of animals like bison and horses. Over time, people began to keep animals as pets, and ancient cultures such as those in Egypt and Mesopotamia kept records of wildlife.

Later, scientists like Aristotle in ancient Greece studied animals to learn about their bodies and behaviors. During the Renaissance, new discoveries changed how people thought about animals. Explorers and scientists began to group living things and study how they grow and act. In the 1800s, Charles Darwin’s idea of evolution explained how species change over time. Today, zoology helps us protect animals and their homes as we face environmental challenges.

Scope

Zoology is the study of animals. It looks at how animals are grouped, their traits, and how they are related. Scientists who study animals are called zoologists. They study many things about animals, like how they behave, how their bodies work, and how they change over time.

We know about around 1.5 million animal species, but scientists think there may be many more that we have not discovered yet! Studying animals helps us understand nature and how all living things are connected.

Branches of zoology

The study of animals, called zoology, is a part of biology. It looks at how animals are built, how they grow, and how they behave. Zoologists also study where animals live and how they fit into their environments.

An array of zoological specimens at the Natural History Museum at the University of Oslo

Zoology has many different areas of study. One area is classification, where scientists group animals based on shared features. Another area is vertebrate zoology, which studies animals with backbones, such as fish, birds, and mammals. Invertebrate zoology looks at animals without backbones, like insects and sponges. Other branches include the study of how animal bodies work, how they develop from eggs, how they evolve over time, and how they behave in the wild. Each of these areas helps us understand more about the amazing variety of life on our planet.

Main article: Scientific classification in zoology

Images

An artistic scientific illustration showing the connections between different species, with humans shown near the top, from a famous 19th-century book about evolution.
A historical chart from 1735 showing how animals were grouped by the scientist Carolus Linnaeus.
Illustration showing the muscles and skeleton of a dog from the front view, helpful for learning about animal anatomy.
A Black-backed Gull with its young chick in a natural setting.
A scientific chart showing how different dog breeds are related to each other and to wolves through their DNA.
A beautiful albino elk standing in its natural habitat at Wagon Trails Animal Park.
A fossilized Pleuroceras ammonite from the Jurassic period, found in Bavaria, Germany.

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Zoology, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.