Background and Aims Alpine and arctic environments worldwide, including high mountains, are dominated by short-stature woody plants (dwarf shrubs). This conspicuous life form asserts considerable influence on local environmental conditions above the treeline, creating its own microhabitat. This study reconstructs the evolution of dwarf shrubs in Alchemilla in the African tropical alpine environment, where they represent one of the largest clades and are among the most common and abundant plants. Methods Different phylogenetic inference methods were used with plastid and nuclear DNA sequence markers, molecular dating (BEAST and RelTime), analyses of diversification rate shifts (MEDUSA and BAMM) and ancestral character and area reconstructio...
Background: Tree hypothesis are invoked to explain species distribution and evolutionary history of ...
Distantly related lineages of the enigmatic giant rosette plants of tropical alpine environments pro...
Aim Low taxon sampling and taxonomic uncertainties still obscure our evolutionary knowledge of many ...
Abstract The monumental work of Olov Hedberg provided deep insights into the spectacular and fragmen...
The monumental work of Olov Hedberg provided deep insights into the spectacular and fragmented tropi...
Times Cited: 0International audienceThe afro-alpine region comprises the high mountains of Ethiopia ...
Aim: African Melastomateae (Melastomataceae) comprise c.185 species occurring in closed or open habi...
The mountains of eastern Africa provide a unique opportunity to study the mode and tempo of evolutio...
Alpine plant radiations are common across all major mountain systems of the world, and have been reg...
Under embargo until: 2022-11-26Tropical alpine floras are renowned for high endemism, spectacular gi...
Mountains are often more species-rich than lowlands. This could be the result of migration from lowl...
Mountains are often more species-rich than lowlands. This could be the result of migration from lowl...
Sub-Saharan Africa includes some 45,000 plant species. The spatial patterns of this diversity have ...
The Afromontane and Afroalpine areas constitute some of the main biodiversity hotspots of Africa. Th...
Aim: The afroalpine sky-islands present one of the most interesting models to study discrete biogeog...
Background: Tree hypothesis are invoked to explain species distribution and evolutionary history of ...
Distantly related lineages of the enigmatic giant rosette plants of tropical alpine environments pro...
Aim Low taxon sampling and taxonomic uncertainties still obscure our evolutionary knowledge of many ...
Abstract The monumental work of Olov Hedberg provided deep insights into the spectacular and fragmen...
The monumental work of Olov Hedberg provided deep insights into the spectacular and fragmented tropi...
Times Cited: 0International audienceThe afro-alpine region comprises the high mountains of Ethiopia ...
Aim: African Melastomateae (Melastomataceae) comprise c.185 species occurring in closed or open habi...
The mountains of eastern Africa provide a unique opportunity to study the mode and tempo of evolutio...
Alpine plant radiations are common across all major mountain systems of the world, and have been reg...
Under embargo until: 2022-11-26Tropical alpine floras are renowned for high endemism, spectacular gi...
Mountains are often more species-rich than lowlands. This could be the result of migration from lowl...
Mountains are often more species-rich than lowlands. This could be the result of migration from lowl...
Sub-Saharan Africa includes some 45,000 plant species. The spatial patterns of this diversity have ...
The Afromontane and Afroalpine areas constitute some of the main biodiversity hotspots of Africa. Th...
Aim: The afroalpine sky-islands present one of the most interesting models to study discrete biogeog...
Background: Tree hypothesis are invoked to explain species distribution and evolutionary history of ...
Distantly related lineages of the enigmatic giant rosette plants of tropical alpine environments pro...
Aim Low taxon sampling and taxonomic uncertainties still obscure our evolutionary knowledge of many ...