<div><p></p><p>Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among extinct lineages, but often find support for conflicting hypotheses of relationships. The resulting lack of phylogenetic resolution is generally explained in terms of data quality and methodological issues, such as character selection. A previous suggestion is that sampling ancestral morphotaxa or sampling multiple taxa descended from a long-lived, unchanging lineage can also yield clades which have no opportunity to share synapomorphies. This lack of character information leads to a lack of ‘intrinsic’ resolution, an issue that cannot be solved with additional morphological data. It is unclear how often we should expect clades t...
Animal phylogenies have been traditionally inferred by using the character state information derived...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
Fossils provide our only direct window into evolutionary events in the distant past. Incorporating t...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
<p>These diagrams depict how patterns of morphological differentiation and sampling of ancestors imp...
Morphology has traditionally played a pivotal role in animal phylogeny since the first evolutionary ...
Cladistic character matrices are routinely repurposed in analyses of morphological disparity. Unfort...
ReviewEvolutionary trees underpin virtually all of biology, and the wealth of new genomic data has e...
Evolutionary trees underpin virtually all of biology, and the wealth of new genomic data has enabled...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
Animal phylogenies have been traditionally inferred by using the character state information derived...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
Fossils provide our only direct window into evolutionary events in the distant past. Incorporating t...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
<p>These diagrams depict how patterns of morphological differentiation and sampling of ancestors imp...
Morphology has traditionally played a pivotal role in animal phylogeny since the first evolutionary ...
Cladistic character matrices are routinely repurposed in analyses of morphological disparity. Unfort...
ReviewEvolutionary trees underpin virtually all of biology, and the wealth of new genomic data has e...
Evolutionary trees underpin virtually all of biology, and the wealth of new genomic data has enabled...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
The recent surge in enthusiasm for simultaneously inferring relationships from extinct and extant sp...
Animal phylogenies have been traditionally inferred by using the character state information derived...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
Fossils provide our only direct window into evolutionary events in the distant past. Incorporating t...