We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 Mb of orthologous sequence from a representative of each of the four extant gibbon genera (Nomascus, Hylobates, Symphalangus, and Hoolock). We used these data to assess the evolutionary relationships between the genera by evaluating the likelihoods of all possible bifurcating trees involving the four taxa. Our analyses provide weak support for a tree with Nomascus and Hylobates as sister taxa and with Hoolock and Symphalangus as sister taxa, though bootstrap resampling suggests that other phylogenetic scenarios are also possible. This uncertainty is due to short internal branch lengths and extensive incomplete lineage sorting across taxa. The ...
Gene flow and incomplete lineage sorting are two distinct sources of phylogenetic conflict, i.e., ge...
FIGURE 6 Bayesian tree of various catarrhines estimated using complete mitochondrial genome sequence...
Gibbons are part of the same superfamily (Hominoidea) as humans and great apes, but their karyotype ...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
Gibbons are believed to have diverged from the larger great apes ∼16.8 MYA and today reside in the r...
BACKGROUND: Uniquely among hominoids, gibbons exist as multiple geographically contiguous taxa exhib...
The Hylobatidae (gibbons) are among the most endangered primates and their evolutionary history and ...
Because the fossil history of gib-bons is virtually unknown,1,2 gibbon evolution can only be reconst...
Gibbons (Hylobatidae) are small, arboreal apes indigenous to Southeast Asia that diverged from other...
Abstract Background The evolutionary relationships of closely related species have long been of inte...
Gibbons are small arboreal apes that display an accelerated rate of evolutionary chromosomal rearran...
Gibbons are small, arboreal, highly endangered apes that are understudied compared with other homino...
In this study we characterized the extension, reciprocal arrangement, and orientation of syntenic ch...
The gibbon karyotype is known to be extensively rearranged when compared to the human and to the anc...
Gene flow and incomplete lineage sorting are two distinct sources of phylogenetic conflict, i.e., ge...
FIGURE 6 Bayesian tree of various catarrhines estimated using complete mitochondrial genome sequence...
Gibbons are part of the same superfamily (Hominoidea) as humans and great apes, but their karyotype ...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
Gibbons are believed to have diverged from the larger great apes ∼16.8 MYA and today reside in the r...
BACKGROUND: Uniquely among hominoids, gibbons exist as multiple geographically contiguous taxa exhib...
The Hylobatidae (gibbons) are among the most endangered primates and their evolutionary history and ...
Because the fossil history of gib-bons is virtually unknown,1,2 gibbon evolution can only be reconst...
Gibbons (Hylobatidae) are small, arboreal apes indigenous to Southeast Asia that diverged from other...
Abstract Background The evolutionary relationships of closely related species have long been of inte...
Gibbons are small arboreal apes that display an accelerated rate of evolutionary chromosomal rearran...
Gibbons are small, arboreal, highly endangered apes that are understudied compared with other homino...
In this study we characterized the extension, reciprocal arrangement, and orientation of syntenic ch...
The gibbon karyotype is known to be extensively rearranged when compared to the human and to the anc...
Gene flow and incomplete lineage sorting are two distinct sources of phylogenetic conflict, i.e., ge...
FIGURE 6 Bayesian tree of various catarrhines estimated using complete mitochondrial genome sequence...
Gibbons are part of the same superfamily (Hominoidea) as humans and great apes, but their karyotype ...