The molecular clock hypothesis is fundamental in evolutionary biology as by assuming constancy of the molecular rate it provides a time frame for evolution. However, increasing evidence shows time dependence of inferred molecular rates with inflated values obtained using recent calibrations. As recent demographic calibrations are virtually non-existent in most species, older phylogenetic calibration points (>1 Ma) are commonly used, which overestimate demographic parameters. To obtain more reliable rates of molecular evolution for population studies, I propose the Calibration of Demographic Transition (CDT) method, which uses the timing of climatic changes over the late glacial warming period to calibrate expansions in various species. Simu...
Molecular-based divergence dating methods, or molecular clocks, are the primary neontological tool f...
Premise of study: Molecular population genetics is a powerful tool to infer how species responded to...
BACKGROUND: Because rates of evolution and species divergence times cannot be estimated directly fro...
The molecular clock hypothesis is fundamental in evolutionary biology as by assuming constancy of th...
The rate of change in DNA is an important parameter for understanding molecular evolution and hence ...
National audienceTo reconstruct the timing of the diversification of life on Earth, biologists combi...
Estimates of the timing of divergence are central to testing the underlying causes of speciation. Re...
The rate of change in DNA is an important parameter for understanding molecular evolution, and hence...
Age estimation from molecular sequences has emerged as a powerful tool for inferring when a plant li...
Phylogenetic estimates of evolutionary timescales can be obtained from nucleotide sequence data usin...
Standard models of molecular evolution cannot estimate absolute speciation times alone, and require ...
Genetic datasets can be used to date evolutionary events, even on recent time scales if sufficient d...
The molecular clock has proved to be extremely valuable in placing timescales on evolutionary events...
The explosive growth of molecular sequence data has made it possible to estimate species divergence ...
Molecular-based divergence dating methods, or molecular clocks, are the primary neontological tool f...
Premise of study: Molecular population genetics is a powerful tool to infer how species responded to...
BACKGROUND: Because rates of evolution and species divergence times cannot be estimated directly fro...
The molecular clock hypothesis is fundamental in evolutionary biology as by assuming constancy of th...
The rate of change in DNA is an important parameter for understanding molecular evolution and hence ...
National audienceTo reconstruct the timing of the diversification of life on Earth, biologists combi...
Estimates of the timing of divergence are central to testing the underlying causes of speciation. Re...
The rate of change in DNA is an important parameter for understanding molecular evolution, and hence...
Age estimation from molecular sequences has emerged as a powerful tool for inferring when a plant li...
Phylogenetic estimates of evolutionary timescales can be obtained from nucleotide sequence data usin...
Standard models of molecular evolution cannot estimate absolute speciation times alone, and require ...
Genetic datasets can be used to date evolutionary events, even on recent time scales if sufficient d...
The molecular clock has proved to be extremely valuable in placing timescales on evolutionary events...
The explosive growth of molecular sequence data has made it possible to estimate species divergence ...
Molecular-based divergence dating methods, or molecular clocks, are the primary neontological tool f...
Premise of study: Molecular population genetics is a powerful tool to infer how species responded to...
BACKGROUND: Because rates of evolution and species divergence times cannot be estimated directly fro...