نتایج جستجو برای: speciation

تعداد نتایج: 14852  

Journal: :Human biology 2013
Michael Dunn Nicole Kruspe Niclas Burenhult

The Aslian language family, located in the Malay Peninsula and southern Thai Isthmus, consists of four distinct branches comprising some 18 languages. These languages predate the now dominant Malay and Thai. The speakers of Aslian languages exhibit some of the highest degree of phylogenetic and societal diversity present in Mainland Southeast Asia today, among them a foraging tradition particul...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2010
James M Sobel Grace F Chen Lorna R Watt Douglas W Schemske

Since Darwin published the "Origin," great progress has been made in our understanding of speciation mechanisms. The early investigations by Mayr and Dobzhansky linked Darwin's view of speciation by adaptive divergence to the evolution of reproductive isolation, and thus provided a framework for studying the origin of species. However, major controversies and questions remain, including: When i...

Journal: :Biology letters 2010
Storrs L Olson Paul J Hearty

During the last half million years, pulses of gigantism in the anagenetic lineage of land snails of the subgenus Poecilozonites on Bermuda were correlated with glacial periods when lower sea level resulted in an island nearly an order of magnitude larger than at present. During those periods, the island was colonized by large vertebrate predators that created selection pressure for large size a...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2003
Devi Stuart-Fox Ian P F Owens

Why does species richness vary so greatly across lineages? Traditionally, variation in species richness has been attributed to deterministic processes, although it is equally plausible that it may result from purely stochastic processes. We show that, based on the best available phylogenetic hypothesis, the pattern of cladogenesis among agamid lizards is not consistent with a random model, with...

Journal: :Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2000
G Bernardi D R Robertson K E Clifton E Azzurro

Parrotfishes of the genus Sparisoma (Scaridae) are ecologically important tropical reef fishes restricted to the Atlantic Ocean. We investigated phylogenetic relationships among the eight extant species within this genus using mitochondrially encoded 12S and 16S ribosomal genes. Our molecular data support the view that (i) Sparisoma originated approximately 14-35 million years ago (mya), probab...

2011
Jun Li Cuizhang Fu Guangchun Lei

Few studies have explored the role of Cenozoic tectonic evolution in shaping patterns and processes of extant animal distributions within East Asian margins. We select Hynobius salamanders (Amphibia: Hynobiidae) as a model to examine biogeographical consequences of Cenozoic tectonic events within East Asian margins. First, we use GenBank molecular data to reconstruct phylogenetic interrelations...

Journal: :Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 1998
K M Saint C C Austin S C Donnellan M N Hutchinson

Phylogenetic reconstruction in molecular systematics has largely been achieved using mitochondrial gene sequences and less frequently sequences of nuclear ribosomal RNA genes. At present few other nuclear genes have been identified that could be used to test these phylogenies. C-mos, a single-copy nuclear oncogene, has been identified as a candidate nuclear marker. Data are presented on the use...

2015
Catarina Rato David James Harris Ana Perera Silvia B. Carvalho Miguel A. Carretero Dennis Rödder Stefan Lötters

The quantification of realized niche overlap and the integration of species distribution models (SDMs) with calibrated phylogenies to study niche evolution are becoming not only powerful tools to understand speciation events, but can also be used as proxies regarding the delimitation of cryptic species. We applied these techniques in order to unravel how the fundamental niche evolved during cla...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2013
Premal Shah Benjamin M Fitzpatrick James A Fordyce

Phylogenetic hypotheses are frequently used to examine variation in rates of diversification across the history of a group. Patterns of diversification-rate variation can be used to infer underlying ecological and evolutionary processes responsible for patterns of cladogenesis. Most existing methods examine rate variation through time. Methods for examining differences in diversification among ...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2007
P R Martin F Bonier J J Tewksbury

The increase in diversity towards the equator arises from latitudinal variation in rates of cladogenesis, extinction, immigration and/or emigration of taxa. We tested the relative contribution of all four processes to the latitudinal gradient in 26 marine invertebrate orders with extensive fossil records, examined previously by David Jablonski. Coupling Jablonski's estimates of latitudinal vari...

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