Premise: Bromeliaceae form a large, ecologically diverse family of angiosperms native to the New World. We use a bromeliad phylogeny based on eight plastid regions to analyze relationships within the family, test a new, eight-subfamily classification, infer the chronology of bromeliad evolution and invasion of different regions, and provide the basis for future analyses of trait evolution and rates of diversification. Methods: We employed maximum-parsimony, maximum-likelihood, and Bayesian approaches to analyze 9341 aligned bases for four outgroups and 90 bromeliad species representing 46 of 58 described genera. We calibrate the resulting phylogeny against time using penalized likelihood applied to a monocot-wide tree based on plastid ndhF ...
Bromeliaceae is a morphologically distinctive and ecologically diverse family originating in the New...
Background and Aims Bromeliads (Bromeliaceae) adapted to rock outcrops or ‘inselbergs' in neotropica...
Background: Plukenetia is a small pantropical genus of lianas and vines with variably sized edible o...
Premise: Bromeliaceae form a large, ecologically diverse family of angiosperms native to the New Wor...
Premise: Bromeliaceae form a large, ecologically diverse family of angiosperms native to the New Wor...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142109/1/ajb20872.pd
Cladistic analysis of ndhF sequences identifies eight major bromeliad clades arranged in ladderlike f...
The authors gratefully acknowledge fi nancial support for this investigation by grants from the Nat...
We present an integrative model predicting associations among epiphytism, the tank habit, entangling...
This study lends strong support to the idea that members of Bromeliaceae have undergone a recent ada...
The evolution of key innovations, novel traits that promote diversification, is often seen as major ...
Inselberg-adapted species of bromeliads (Bromeliaceae) have been suggested as model systems for und...
The evolution of key innovations, novel traits that promote diversification, is often seen as major ...
The systematics, biogeography and evolution of the \u27Ronnbergia Alliance,\u27 a nested lineage wit...
The evolution of key innovations, novel traits that promote diversification, is often seen as major ...
Bromeliaceae is a morphologically distinctive and ecologically diverse family originating in the New...
Background and Aims Bromeliads (Bromeliaceae) adapted to rock outcrops or ‘inselbergs' in neotropica...
Background: Plukenetia is a small pantropical genus of lianas and vines with variably sized edible o...
Premise: Bromeliaceae form a large, ecologically diverse family of angiosperms native to the New Wor...
Premise: Bromeliaceae form a large, ecologically diverse family of angiosperms native to the New Wor...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142109/1/ajb20872.pd
Cladistic analysis of ndhF sequences identifies eight major bromeliad clades arranged in ladderlike f...
The authors gratefully acknowledge fi nancial support for this investigation by grants from the Nat...
We present an integrative model predicting associations among epiphytism, the tank habit, entangling...
This study lends strong support to the idea that members of Bromeliaceae have undergone a recent ada...
The evolution of key innovations, novel traits that promote diversification, is often seen as major ...
Inselberg-adapted species of bromeliads (Bromeliaceae) have been suggested as model systems for und...
The evolution of key innovations, novel traits that promote diversification, is often seen as major ...
The systematics, biogeography and evolution of the \u27Ronnbergia Alliance,\u27 a nested lineage wit...
The evolution of key innovations, novel traits that promote diversification, is often seen as major ...
Bromeliaceae is a morphologically distinctive and ecologically diverse family originating in the New...
Background and Aims Bromeliads (Bromeliaceae) adapted to rock outcrops or ‘inselbergs' in neotropica...
Background: Plukenetia is a small pantropical genus of lianas and vines with variably sized edible o...