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A vivid window into the practice of zoology in 1978, Revue Suisse de Zoologie Tome 85 Facicule 1 gathers meticulous studies and specimen records produced by Geneva’s museums and the Societe Zoologique Suisse. A must for biologists everywhere. Part of a respected zoological journal collection, this 1978 scientific publication balances rigorous animal taxonomy research with clear natural-history commentary, forming a compact natural history anthology where technical taxonomy and field observation sit side by side. The issue preserves detailed museum specimen catalogue material and distributional notes that continue to inform studies of regional fauna; researchers working on Swiss zoology studies will find locality data and taxonomic clarification that remain relevant to contemporary inventories. Its pages convey both the methodological exactness of a professional zoologist series and an accessible voice for curious readers interested in Geneva natural history. Readers will encounter authoritative taxonomic notes, annotated lists and the focused reporting typical of late-20th-century scientific periodicals, a combination that supports both immediate reading and long-term scholarly use.Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today’s and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector’s item and a cultural treasure. Framed by the practices of the European zoological society, the volume functions as an academic reference for biologists and a reliable university library resource, offering original reports, specimen catalogue entries and referenceable data that support ongoing research. Accessible to casual readers yet prized by classic-literature collectors, it bridges readable natural history and archival rigour: a heritage title that rewards both bedside browsing and methodical study. For libraries assembling comprehensive holdings or collectors building a professional zoologist series, this issue is a provenance-rich addition that preserves an important slice of Geneva’s museum-driven scholarship. It offers context for comparative studies and historical research into collecting practices and taxonomic decision-making. As both a study tool and an object of bibliographic interest, it enriches curated holdings and supports long-term research agendas.