Living amphibians exhibit a diversity of ecologies, life histories, and species-rich lineages that offers opportunities for studies of adaptive radiation. We characterize a diverse clade of frogs (Kaloula, Microhylidae) in the Philippine island archipelago as an example of an adaptive radiation into three primary habitat specialists or ecotypes. We use a novel phylogenetic estimate for this clade to evaluate the tempo of lineage accumulation and morphological diversification. Because species-level phylogenetic estimates for Philippine Kaloula are lacking, we employ dense population sampling to determine the appropriate evolutionary lineages for diversification analyses. We explicitly take phylogenetic uncertainty into account when calculati...
Recent higher-level frog phylogenetic analyses have included a few members of the endemic Philippine...
This is the publisher's version, which may also be found at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/66083
This is the publisher's version, which may also be found at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/66083
Living amphibians exhibit a diversity of ecologies, life histories, and species-rich lineages that o...
Because island communities are derived from the mainland, they are often less diverse by comparison....
The microhylid frog genus Kaloula is an adaptive radiation spanning the edge of the Asian mainland a...
The microhylid frog genus Kaloula is an adaptive radiation spanning the edge of the Asian mainland a...
The microhylid frog genus Kaloula is an adaptive radiation spanning the edge of the Asian mainland a...
Adaptive radiation is proposed to play a key role in generating differences in species richness amon...
Adaptive radiation is proposed to play a key role in generating differences in species richness amon...
Because island communities are derived from the mainland, they are often less diverse by comparison....
Replicate radiations, the repeated multiplication of species associated with ecological divergence, ...
Replicate radiations, the repeated multiplication of species associated with ecological divergence, ...
Recent higher-level frog phylogenetic analyses have included a few members of the endemic Philippine...
Recent higher-level frog phylogenetic analyses have included a few members of the endemic Philippine...
Recent higher-level frog phylogenetic analyses have included a few members of the endemic Philippine...
This is the publisher's version, which may also be found at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/66083
This is the publisher's version, which may also be found at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/66083
Living amphibians exhibit a diversity of ecologies, life histories, and species-rich lineages that o...
Because island communities are derived from the mainland, they are often less diverse by comparison....
The microhylid frog genus Kaloula is an adaptive radiation spanning the edge of the Asian mainland a...
The microhylid frog genus Kaloula is an adaptive radiation spanning the edge of the Asian mainland a...
The microhylid frog genus Kaloula is an adaptive radiation spanning the edge of the Asian mainland a...
Adaptive radiation is proposed to play a key role in generating differences in species richness amon...
Adaptive radiation is proposed to play a key role in generating differences in species richness amon...
Because island communities are derived from the mainland, they are often less diverse by comparison....
Replicate radiations, the repeated multiplication of species associated with ecological divergence, ...
Replicate radiations, the repeated multiplication of species associated with ecological divergence, ...
Recent higher-level frog phylogenetic analyses have included a few members of the endemic Philippine...
Recent higher-level frog phylogenetic analyses have included a few members of the endemic Philippine...
Recent higher-level frog phylogenetic analyses have included a few members of the endemic Philippine...
This is the publisher's version, which may also be found at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/66083
This is the publisher's version, which may also be found at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/66083