Ichthyology
Ichthyology, commonly defined as "the study of fish" or "that branch of zoology dealing with fish" has a long documented history, dating thousands of years back to the ancient Egyptians, Indians, Chinese, Greeks and Romans (Cuvier 1995).
This long, sustained interest in fish is due to their double role as highly speciose denizens of a fascinating, yet alien world, and as human food. It has generated, over the centuries, highly heterogeneous information—mainly taxonomic, but also referring to zoogeography, behavior, food, predators, environmental tolerances, etc.
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Information on fish is widely scattered |
This huge amount of information, embodied in a widely scattered literature, has gradually forced ichthyologists to specialize, and thus accounts on fish are now either global, but highly specialized (e.g., Eschmeyer’s Catalog of Fishes of 1998, or Pietsch and Grobecker’s Frogfishes of the World of 1987, to name two outstanding representatives), or local and deep (e.g., Northern European work on cod, or Canadian work on Pacific salmon, both used as paradigmatic fish in many fisheries textbooks). FishBase, as presented in this and, in more detail, in the other chapters of this book, is an attempt to provide key information on fishes of the world, that is both global and deep.
The current version of FishBase contains all fishes known to science and addresses the needs of a vast array of potential clients, ranging from fisheries managers to biology teachers. The features of FishBase that enable it to meet such wide range of needs reside in its architecture, which makes extensive use of modern relational database techniques.
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Standardized qualitative information is structured through multiple choice fields |
Other features of FishBase:
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Standardized qualitative information is structured through multiple choice fields |
For teachers of aquatic biology, or of specialized ichthyology courses, the uses of FishBase will range from practical solutions to theoretical issues:
A series of lectures in ichthyology could be structured around FishBase as illustrated in the examples below.
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The species concept and its implications |
A document implementing most of these ideas, called ‘Fish on Line’ is available from the FishBase web site (see Ichthyology course; www.fishbase.org/fish_on_line.htm).
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FishBase can be used as a basis for Bachelor's or Master's theses |
In the context of higher education, FishBase may also serve as background for Bachelor’s or Master’s theses wherein an area of ichthyology not presently or suitably covered by the tables in this version of FishBase would be ‘broken up’ into choice, numeric and text fields, captured and then analyzed on a comparative basis.
Two theses of this type, one on Mediterranean fish larvae, and one by Achenbach (1990) on fish diseases, have been guided by R. Froese, working with the candidates on behalf of their theses supervisors.
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References |
Achenbach, I. 1990. Aufbau und Entwicklung eines rechnergestützten Informationssystems zur Identifikation von Fischkrankheiten. Christian-Albrechts-Universität, Kiel. MS thesis. 58 p.
Cuvier, G. 1995. (French original 1828) Historical portrait of the progress of ichthyology, from its origin to our own time. Translated by A.J. Simpson and edited by T.W. Pietsch. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore. 366 p.
Eschmeyer, W.N., Editor. 1998. Catalog of fishes. Special Publication, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco. 3 vols., 2905 p.
Nelson, J.S. 1994. Fishes of the world. 3rd ed. John Wiley and Sons, New York. 600 p.
Pietsch, T.W. and D.B. Grobecker. 1987. Frogfishes of the world. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California. 420 p.
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