The sugar glider (Petaurus breviceps) shows considerable variation in external morphology and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diversity across its distribution in New Guinea and Australia. Here we investigate the phylogeography of P. breviceps in Australia using data from two mitochondrial genes (ND2 and ND4) and a nuclear gene (ω-globin). Phylogenetic analyses revealed the existence of two divergent mtDNA clades that are distributed over distinct geographical regions, one from coastal New South Wales and south-eastern Queensland and a second over the remaining distributional range of the species in Australia. The two groups generally had distinct ω-globin haplotypes that differed by one or two mutational steps. Analyses of Molecular Variation fu...
Aim: To test the congruence of phylogeographic patterns and processes between a woodland agamid liza...
Jacky dragons (Amphibolurus muricatus) are ubiquitous in south-eastern Australia and were one of the...
Arboreal gliders are vulnerable to habitat fragmentation and to barriers that extend their glide dis...
Subspecific status has often been used as a surrogate for conservation unit, but does not always ref...
The glider genus Petaurus comprises a group of arboreal and nocturnal marsupial species from New Gui...
The gliding petaurids are small sized arboreal and nocturnal marsupials restricted to Australia and ...
The Australian sugar glider, Petaurus breviceps s.l., is widely distributed across eastern and north...
Quaternary climate fluctuations, such as the contraction-expansion cycles of eastern Australia’s wid...
Australian wet forests have undergone a contraction in range since the mid-Tertiary, resulting in a ...
Marsupials have complex and interesting socioecology and life history strategies that differ quite ...
The platypus Ornithorhynchus anatinus is an endemic monotreme species with a wide latitudinal distri...
Although it is well understood that New Guinea and Australia are essentially one landmass that conne...
Comparative phylogeography can reveal processes and historical events that shape the biodiversity of...
The northern bettong, Bettongia tropica, is an endangered species of Potoroidae with a restricted di...
Petaurus breviceps and Petaurus norfolcensis have produced hybrids in captivity, however there are n...
Aim: To test the congruence of phylogeographic patterns and processes between a woodland agamid liza...
Jacky dragons (Amphibolurus muricatus) are ubiquitous in south-eastern Australia and were one of the...
Arboreal gliders are vulnerable to habitat fragmentation and to barriers that extend their glide dis...
Subspecific status has often been used as a surrogate for conservation unit, but does not always ref...
The glider genus Petaurus comprises a group of arboreal and nocturnal marsupial species from New Gui...
The gliding petaurids are small sized arboreal and nocturnal marsupials restricted to Australia and ...
The Australian sugar glider, Petaurus breviceps s.l., is widely distributed across eastern and north...
Quaternary climate fluctuations, such as the contraction-expansion cycles of eastern Australia’s wid...
Australian wet forests have undergone a contraction in range since the mid-Tertiary, resulting in a ...
Marsupials have complex and interesting socioecology and life history strategies that differ quite ...
The platypus Ornithorhynchus anatinus is an endemic monotreme species with a wide latitudinal distri...
Although it is well understood that New Guinea and Australia are essentially one landmass that conne...
Comparative phylogeography can reveal processes and historical events that shape the biodiversity of...
The northern bettong, Bettongia tropica, is an endangered species of Potoroidae with a restricted di...
Petaurus breviceps and Petaurus norfolcensis have produced hybrids in captivity, however there are n...
Aim: To test the congruence of phylogeographic patterns and processes between a woodland agamid liza...
Jacky dragons (Amphibolurus muricatus) are ubiquitous in south-eastern Australia and were one of the...
Arboreal gliders are vulnerable to habitat fragmentation and to barriers that extend their glide dis...