The Australian elapid snake Hoplocephalus stephensii (Stephens' Banded Snake) is patchily distributed in disjunct forest remnants in eastern Australia and is listed as threatened in both states in which it occurs (Qld and NSW). Here we focus on the phylogeography of H. stephensii to address (1) the genetic distinctiveness of this taxon within its genus and (2) the level of genetic diversity present within and between disjunct populations from throughout the species' range. We sequenced an approximately 900 base pair DNA fragment of the mitochondrial genome that includes half of the ND4 gene and three tRNA genes. We obtained sequence data from 15 H. stephensii individuals drawn from four populations, plus representatives of the other Hoploce...
Pleistocene sea level changes substantially shaped the biogeography of northern Australia and the In...
The Papuan region, comprising New Guinea and nearby islands, has a complex geological history that h...
The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comPhylogenetic relationships among Hyd...
The Broad-headed snake Hoplocephalus bungaroides is one of Australia's most endangered vertebrates. ...
For endangered species that persist as apparently isolated populations within a previously more exte...
For endangered species that persist as apparently isolated populations within a previously more exte...
For endangered species that persist as apparently isolated populations within a previously more exte...
The venomous snake subfamily Hydrophiinae includes more than 40 genera and approximately 200 species...
The definitive version may be found at www.wiley.comOne of the most prolific radiations of venomous ...
King brown snakes or mulga snakes (Pseudechis australis) are the largest and among the most dangerou...
The Papuan region, comprising New Guinea and nearby islands, has a complex geological history that h...
We analyze the phylogeny of three genera of Australasian elapid snakes (Acanthophis—death adders; Ox...
Pleistocene sea level changes substantially shaped the biogeography of northern Australia and the In...
We analyze the phylogeny of three genera of Australasian elapid snakes (Acanthophis—death adders; Ox...
The genus Drysdalia contains three recognised species of elapid (front-fanged) snakes, distributed a...
Pleistocene sea level changes substantially shaped the biogeography of northern Australia and the In...
The Papuan region, comprising New Guinea and nearby islands, has a complex geological history that h...
The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comPhylogenetic relationships among Hyd...
The Broad-headed snake Hoplocephalus bungaroides is one of Australia's most endangered vertebrates. ...
For endangered species that persist as apparently isolated populations within a previously more exte...
For endangered species that persist as apparently isolated populations within a previously more exte...
For endangered species that persist as apparently isolated populations within a previously more exte...
The venomous snake subfamily Hydrophiinae includes more than 40 genera and approximately 200 species...
The definitive version may be found at www.wiley.comOne of the most prolific radiations of venomous ...
King brown snakes or mulga snakes (Pseudechis australis) are the largest and among the most dangerou...
The Papuan region, comprising New Guinea and nearby islands, has a complex geological history that h...
We analyze the phylogeny of three genera of Australasian elapid snakes (Acanthophis—death adders; Ox...
Pleistocene sea level changes substantially shaped the biogeography of northern Australia and the In...
We analyze the phylogeny of three genera of Australasian elapid snakes (Acanthophis—death adders; Ox...
The genus Drysdalia contains three recognised species of elapid (front-fanged) snakes, distributed a...
Pleistocene sea level changes substantially shaped the biogeography of northern Australia and the In...
The Papuan region, comprising New Guinea and nearby islands, has a complex geological history that h...
The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.comPhylogenetic relationships among Hyd...