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The International Committee on Bionomenclature (ICB) was created in 1995 by joint decision of the International Union of Biological Sciences and the International Union of Microbiological Societies to explore ways and means to harmonise the various sets of international rules governing the creation and use of scientific names of organisms.
- International Committee on Bionomenclature – Constitution
The International Committee on Bionomenclature (ICB) was...
- International Committee on Bionomenclature – Constitution
The International Committee on Bionomenclature (ICB) was created in 1995 by joint decision of the International Union of Biological Sciences (IUBS) and the International Union of Microbiological Societies (IUMS) – the Founding Unions – to explore ways and means to harmonise the various
The International Committee on Bionomenclature (ICB) is an international scientific, non-commercial membership association of unlimited duration, constituted under the relevant provisions (currently: Art. 60 to 79) of the Swiss Civil Code. Its duration is unlimited. Its seat is Winterthur (Ct. Zürich).
The International Committee on Bionomenclature (ICB) was established jointly by IUBS and the International Union of Microbiological Societies (IUMS) in June 1995, in accordance with Resolution No. 3 of the 25th General Assembly of IUBS. The new body was mandated "to expedite work towards a unified system of bionomenclature".
ICB: Infrastructures for unifying past and future naming of organisms (2016-2019) Outline and Objective. Bionomenclature (ICB) was created in 1995 by joint decision of the International Union of Biological
BIONOMENCLATURE The International Committee on Bionomenclature (ICB), the Draft BioCode (1997), and the IUBS resolution on bionomenclature David L. Hawksworth2 & John McNeill3 At its meeting in Amsterdam in 1991, the 24th General Assembly of the Interna-tional Union of Biological Sciences (IUBS), the "home Union for biological nomen-
Document 16 August 2017. Terms Used in Bionomenclature. The naming of organisms (and plant communities) This text is a comprehensive a glossary of over 2,100 terms used in biological nomenclature - the naming of whole organisms of all kinds. It is accompanied by a web application that enables the glossary to facilitate semantic linking on the web.