Taxonomists consider: • which organisms belong to a given taxon • which criteria are to be used for deciding inclusion. This is especially the case in context of rank-based nomenclature (
Linnaean taxonomy). Once a taxon is given a formal
scientific name, its use is governed by one of the
nomenclature codes that specify the correct scientific name for a particular grouping. Initial attempts at preserving human knowledge of plants and animals were presumably made in prehistoric times by
hunter-gatherers, as suggested by
folk taxonomies interpreted from
archeological and
anthropological studies. Much later, as of
Aristotle's teachings, and later stillas of the published works of
Magnol,
Tournefort, and
Carl Linnaeus, (his
Systema Naturae, 10th edition (1758)), and as of the unpublished works of
Bernard and
Antoine Laurent de Jussieuthen did European naturalists and scientists begin documenting this new field of human knowledge. The idea of a unit-based system to classify the characteristics of plants and animals (later known as
biological classification) was first made widely available in 1805 via
Augustin Pyramus de Candolle's
Principes élémentaires de botanique, published as the introduction to
Jean-Baptiste Lamarck's
Flore françoise, 3rd ed. (1805), which treatise presented a system for the "natural classification" of plants. From that time forward
systematists have competed, collaborated, and publishedwhile providing for organizing and classifying human knowledge of the life forms on planet Earth. In modern biology studies, a "good" or "useful" taxon is commonly taken to be one that reflects
evolutionary relationships. Many modern systematists are advocates of
phylogenetic nomenclature; they use
cladistic methods that require taxa to be
monophyletic (i.e., show all the descendants of a common ancestor). Their basic unit, the
clade, is equivalent to the taxon, and their using the clade implies that taxa should reflect evolutionary relationships. Similarly, among those contemporary taxonomists working with the traditional Linnean (binomial) nomenclature, only a few still propose taxa they know to be
paraphyletic. An example of a long-established taxon that is paraphyleticmeaning
not also a cladeis the
class Reptilia: the reptiles. Birds and mammals are descendants of animals long classed as reptiles; but traditionally, neither was placed in class Reptilia. Instead, birds are found in the class
Aves, and mammals in the class
Mammalia. == History ==