Comparative biology
{{More citations needed|date=January 2025}}
File:Heads of Scelidopetalon biwenxuani and Amblyopus vittatus - ZooKeys-317-081-g001.jpeg family of beetles: Scelidopetalon biwenxuani (1) and Amblyopus vittatus (2). Scale bar = 0.5 mm.]]
Comparative biology uses natural variation and disparity to understand the patterns of life at all levels—from genes to communities—and the critical role of organisms in ecosystems. Comparative biology is a cross-lineage approach to understanding the phylogenetic history of individuals or higher taxa and the mechanisms and patterns that drives it. Comparative biology encompasses Evolutionary Biology, Systematics, Neontology, Paleontology, Ethology, Anthropology, and Biogeography as well as historical approaches to Developmental biology, Genomics, Physiology, Ecology and many other areas of the biological sciences. The comparative approach also has numerous applications in human health, genetics, biomedicine, and conservation biology. The biological relationships (phylogenies, pedigree) are important for comparative analyses and usually represented by a phylogenetic tree or cladogram to differentiate those features with single origins (Homology) from those with multiple origins (Homoplasy).{{Cite web |date=2021-07-12 |title=Array {{!}} Conference Series {{!}} International Scientific and Medical Conferences |url=https://integrativebiology.insightconferences.com/events-list/comparative-biology |access-date=2025-01-19 |website=integrativebiology.insightconferences.com |language=en}}