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Neontology

Adapted from Wikipedia ยท Discoverer experience

A scientific illustration showing the 'tree of life' by Ernst Haeckel, representing how different species are connected through evolution.

Neontology is a part of biology that studies living or recent organisms. Unlike paleontology, which looks at fossils of animals and plants that no longer exist, neontology focuses on species that are still alive today. These are called extant taxa, meaning there are still members of these groups around. For example, the Indian elephant (Elephas maximus) is an extant species, while the woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) is extinct.

Most biologists, zoologists, and botanists work in neontology without even using the term often. The word "neontologist" is usually used by paleontologists to describe anyone who is not a paleontologist. This shows how these two fields study life in different ways.

Neontology looks at how living species change over time, usually within the last 100 to 1,000 years. It uses experiments, cladistics, and studies of genetics to understand how species evolve. Because neontologists can study real animals and plants, they can collect samples and perform tests that paleontologists cannot do with fossils. This makes neontology very important for understanding the world around us today.

Information gaps

When scientists accepted the synthetic theory of evolution, they began to organize living things in new ways. This created some missing pieces in what we know from fossils, especially about early humans. Some scientists thought there might be a creature called an "ape-man," but this idea mixed up studies of living animals with studies of fossils. If we only looked at living animals, we might imagine something like Bigfoot. But when we look at fossils, we can find early human ancestors instead.

Extant taxa versus extinct taxa

Neontology focuses on studying living or recently living organisms, called extant taxa. It is tricky to say a species is truly gone forever, as some thought to be extinct have been found again. For example, the Bouvier's red colobus monkey was believed extinct until it was rediscovered in 2015 after being missing for 40 years. The International Union for Conservation of Nature says a species is recently extinct if it disappeared after the year 1500 C.E..

Neontology importance

Neontology studies living organisms and helps us understand how they evolve. It uses ideas like natural selection and genes to explain changes in species over time. Scientists use neontology to compare things like teeth in monkeys and humans, learning how genes influence these differences. This helps us see how species, including primates, have changed and developed through history.

Main article: natural selection

Images

A beautiful butterfly perched on a flower, showcasing nature in action.

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

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