Revision as of 17:26, 27 September 2007 by imported>Anthony.Sebastian
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Workgroups are no longer used for group communications, but they still are used to group articles into fields of interest.
Each article is assigned to 1-3 Workgroups via the article's Metadata.
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Checklist-generated categories:
Subpage categories:
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Missing subpage categories:
Article statuses:
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How you can help
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Launch workgroup tagging of articles
Any article related to the Biology Workgroup should be placed in the category [[Category:Biology Workgroup]]". This means that we think the biology workgroup will be one of the main groups to manage this article. Note, the tag is *not* "[[Category:Biology]]"; that's because we're attaching the article to its *management*.
Note: only articles with the biology workgroup category tag will been seen in the recent changes for all biology articles (see header above).
Launch area managemnet: deferred We should probably defer selection of discipline workgroup management until after more people in each area have arrived, and we have had a chance to finalize how this management will be selected.
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Proposed subgroups
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The organisation we inherited from Wikipedia is subdivided into disciplines within biology, however, we do not have to follow such a format. We can move forward with subgroups that seem more natural, and I imagine some subgroups will include several related disciplines. We can discuss this more on the subgroups thread, in the biology forum, as we reach a critical mass of editors and authors.
Relevant lists and headers from Wikipedia are shown at the bottom of this section. Also, the list of high priority articles in the next section are currently categorized by discipline.
List of biology disciplines
Template:Biology-footer
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High priority articles
This list of articles is not complete but it can be used as a starting point for writing new articles or focus our efforts towards getting more articles approved. Articles in bold are regarded as a higher priority. Those struck through are considered as low priority.
Core article
The list below is adapted from the high priority articles above and the small list that has already started at CZ:Core_Articles#Biology. These are articles that we deem vital to get the biology section going. Please add and delete from this list. We are rstricted to 198 articles that we think are needed now.
For a more comprehensive list search for the red links in the CZ:Biology_Workgroup/list or CZ:Biology_Workgroup/concepts.
Just to clarify, i combined the list the concepts and the core article we already had. I then edited for duplicates and removed items that did not seem to fit the core concept. We now have 300 articles. Feel free to add topics that are missing. Also feel free to group articles into topic related concepts, although this alphabetical list is probably OK for those wanting to see what is missing from CZ. Chris Day (talk) 16:33, 27 September 2007 (CDT)
Biology related
- abiogenesis
- acetyl CoA
- acid
- acquired characteristics
- ACTH
- actin stub
- action potential stub
- action spectrum
- activation energy
- active site
- active transport
- adaptive radiation
- ADH
- aerobic
- Alfred Russel Wallace
- algae
- allele
- anaerobic respiration
- Ant
- antibiotic resistance
- antibody
- Antoni van Leeuwenhoek
- apoptosis
- Arabidopsis thaliana
- archaebacteria
- Asexual reproduction
- ATP synthase
- autosome
- Biochemistry
- biological emergence
- biological membrane
- blastula
- Botany
- Bryophyte
- Calvin cycle
- Carbohydrate
- carbon cycle
- carnivore
- Carolus Linnaeus
- carotenoid
- Cell biology
- cell division
- Cell nucleus
- Cell wall
- Cellular differentiation
- cellulose
- centromere
- chemautotrophic
- chemiosmosis
- Chi square test
- chiasma
- chitin
- chlorophyll
- Chloroplast
- chromatid
- chromatin
- chromosome
- circadian rhythm
- Cladistics
- Classical genetics
- codon
- collagen
- conformation
- convergent evolution
- Cytoplasm
- cytosol
- Developmental biology
- diffusion
- Digestion
- dimer
- diploid
- DNA replication
- DNA virus
- double helix
- Drosophila melanogaster
- ecological niche
- egg (biology)
- Electron transport chain
- electrophoresis
- embryo
- Endoplasmic reticulum
- endosymbiosis
- enhancer
- enzyme kinetics
- Ernst Haeckel
- eubacteria
- evolutionary tree
- Excretion
- exon
- Eye
- facilitated diffusion
- FADH2
- fat
- feedback inhibition
- Flagellum
- fluid mosaic model
- Francis Crick
- fundamental niche
- fungi
- gamete
- gene duplication
- gene pool
- gene
- genetic code
- genetic drift
- genetic recombination
- genome
- Genomics
- glucose
- glycoprotein
- Golgi apparatus
- gravitropism
- Gregor Mendel
- growth curve
- habitat (ecology)
- haploid
- herbivore
- heredity
- hermaphrodite
- Hershey-Chase experiment
- heterochromatin
- heterozygote
- hibernation
- homeobox
- homeostasis
- Homology (biology)
- homozygote
- household gene
- Human Genome Project
- human
- hybrid
- insectivores
- intestine
- intron
- invasive species
- ion channel
- James Watson
- Jean-Baptiste Lamarck
- knock-out mouse
- Konrad Lorenz
- Lac repressor
- leaf
- liver
- locus (genetics)
- Louis Pasteur
- Lynn Margulis
- Lyon hypothesis
- Macroevolution
- mass extinction
- mass spectrometry
- Max Delbrück
- meiosis
- Mendelian inheritance
- metaphase
- Michaelis-Menten kinetics
- Microarray
- Microevolution
- microsatellite
- microtubules
- Mitochondrion
- mitosis
- Molecular biology
- molecular clock
- monoclonal antibody
- monophyletic
- Muller's ratchet
- mutagen
- myosin
- neuron
- neurospora crassa
- Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
- nitrogen cycle
- Non-coding RNA
- non-competitive inhibition
- Nucleic acid
- nucleosome
- nucleotide
- Okazaki fragment
- oncogene
- operon
- osmosis
- oxidative phosphorylation
- parasitism
- Peptide
- peroxisome
- phagocytosis
- phenotype
- phloem
- phospholipid bilayer
- phospholipid
- phosphorylation
- Photosynthesis
- phylogeny
- pigment
- Plant physiology
- Plant tissues
- plant
- plasmid
- plasmolysis
- plastid
- Polymerase chain reaction
- polypeptide
- polysaccharide
- population
- predation
- Pregnancy
- primary structure
- promoter
- protein biosynthesis
- protein folding
- proteolysis
- proteomics
- pseudopod
- punctuated equilibrium
- Punnett square
- purine
- pyrimidine
- Quantitative trait loci
- quaternary structure
- receptor (biochemistry)
- recombination
- Redox
- Reproduction
- Restriction enzyme
- retrovirus
- Ribosome
- RNA virus
- root
- secondary structure
- seed
- senescence
- sequencing
- Sexual reproduction
- signal transduction
- sister chromatid
- Skeleton
- Skin
- Southern blot
- speciation
- sperm
- Splicing (genetics)
- starch
- stoma
- substrate (biochemistry)
- symbiosis
- Systematics
- taxis
- Taxonomy
- telomere
- tertiary structure
- testes
- thermocline
- thermoregulation
- Thomas Hunt Morgan
- thylakoid
- Trait (biological)
- transcription (genetics)
- transcription factor
- Transformation (genetics)
- tropism
- twin
- Vacuole
- vesicle (biology)
- Visual perception
- vitamin
- Wobble base pair
- X chromosome
- xanthophyll
- xylem
- Y chromosome
- Zoology
- zygote
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Health Sciences related:
Move article red links to this column from first column if they are more appropriate for health sciences. Or, move back to the first column if these article names are not suitable for health sciences. [I find it difficult to define criteria for "more appropriate for health sciences". If biologists study and research a topic, it seems appropriate for consideration as a biology core topic. Seven of the first ten in this second column (acid-base physiology, arterial system, auditory system, blood, bone, capillary, endocrine system) do not seem more appropriate for health sciences than for biology. Acid-base disorders, arteriosclerosis, hearing deficits, blood dyscrasias, osteoporosis, sickle cell crisis, and endocrinopathies -- yes. Just an opinion. Let's not give away the store. --Anthony.Sebastian (Talk) 18:26, 27 September 2007 (CDT)]
- Acid-base physiology
- albinism
- Arterial system
- Auditory system
- Blood
- Bone
- capillary
- diabetes
- Down syndrome
- Endocrine system
- gene therapy
- genetic fingerprint
- Heart
- immune system
- karyotype
- Klinefelter syndrome
- lung
- malaria
- muscle
- nondisjunction
- organ (anatomy)
- Reproductive system
- Respiration (physiology)
- tumor
- Turner syndrome
- vaccine
- Viral diseases
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Already have these:
Move these to the first column if they need a lot of work.
- acetylcholine
- adaptation
- Adenosine triphosphate
- Alexander Fleming
- amino acid
- anabolism
- Anatomy
- animal
- bacteria
- Bioinformatics
- biotechnology
- cancer
- catabolism
- cell (biology)
- Cellular respiration
- Charles Darwin
- circulatory system
- citric acid cycle
- cloning
- cytoskeleton
- dihybrid cross
- DNA
- E. coli
- Ecology
- endosymbiotic theory
- enzyme
- epigenetics
- eukaryote
- Evolution
- fermentation (biochemistry)
- flower
- Genetics
- genotype
- glycogen
- histone
- hormone
- insect
- insulin
- kidney
- life
- Lipid
- macromolecule
- marine biology
- microbiology
- microfilament
- mutation
- natural selection
- nervous system
- neurotransmitter
- organelle
- organism
- Physiology
- plasma membrane
- pollination
- prion
- prokaryote
- Protein
- protist
- RNA
- species
- stem cell
- synapse
- systems biology
- transposon
- virus
- wood
- x-ray diffraction
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Bear in mind the Health Sciences Workgroup has 198, too, and there must not be overlap. --Larry Sanger 12:02, 27 September 2007 (CDT)
Tree-of-life subgroup
A major part of the articles in the biology workgroup can be categorized under the concept of Tree of Life. All article about a species, genus or any other taxonomic level are part of this subgroup.
Naming convention
To be determined
Taxoboxes
Taxoboxes facilitate the navigation through the Tree-of-Life and each taxon is required to have one using the Template:Taxobox.
Major topics from wikipedia biology portal