Understanding the history that underlies patterns of species richness across the Tree of Life requires an investigation of the mechanisms that not only generate young species-rich clades, but also those that maintain species-poor lineages over long stretches of evolutionary time. However, diversification dynamics that underlie ancient species-poor lineages are often hidden due to a lack of fossil evidence. Using information from the fossil record and time calibrated molecular phylogenies, we investigate the history of lineage diversification in Polypteridae, which is the sister lineage of all other ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii). Despite originating at least 390 million years (Myr) ago, molecular timetrees support a Neogene origin for t...
Fishes comprise a majority of living vertebrate species, with an extensive fossil record spanning mo...
The Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) is the largest and most diverse vertebrate group, but little ...
Fishes represent more than half of all living vertebrate species, but patterns of fish diversity rem...
Understanding the history that underlies patterns of species richness across the Tree of Life requir...
Understanding the history that underlies patterns of species richness across the Tree of Life requir...
Modern ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) comprise half of extant vertebrate species and are widely ...
Neopterygian fishes represent over half of vertebrate richness in the Recent and display staggering ...
Ecological opportunity arising in the aftermath of mass extinction events is thought to be a powerfu...
Molecular phylogenies suggest some major radiations of open-ocean fish clades occurred roughly coinc...
Reconstructing deep-time biogeographic histories is limited by the comparatively recent diversificat...
Spiny-rayed fishes, or acanthomorphs, comprise nearly one-third of all living vertebrates. Despite t...
Cichlid fishes are a key model system in the study of adaptive radiation, speciation and evolutionar...
The Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) is the largest and most diverse vertebrate group, but little ...
Over half of all vertebrates are “fishes”, which exhibit enormous diversity in morphology, physiolog...
Understanding the process that underlie the disparity in species richness across different taxonomic...
Fishes comprise a majority of living vertebrate species, with an extensive fossil record spanning mo...
The Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) is the largest and most diverse vertebrate group, but little ...
Fishes represent more than half of all living vertebrate species, but patterns of fish diversity rem...
Understanding the history that underlies patterns of species richness across the Tree of Life requir...
Understanding the history that underlies patterns of species richness across the Tree of Life requir...
Modern ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) comprise half of extant vertebrate species and are widely ...
Neopterygian fishes represent over half of vertebrate richness in the Recent and display staggering ...
Ecological opportunity arising in the aftermath of mass extinction events is thought to be a powerfu...
Molecular phylogenies suggest some major radiations of open-ocean fish clades occurred roughly coinc...
Reconstructing deep-time biogeographic histories is limited by the comparatively recent diversificat...
Spiny-rayed fishes, or acanthomorphs, comprise nearly one-third of all living vertebrates. Despite t...
Cichlid fishes are a key model system in the study of adaptive radiation, speciation and evolutionar...
The Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) is the largest and most diverse vertebrate group, but little ...
Over half of all vertebrates are “fishes”, which exhibit enormous diversity in morphology, physiolog...
Understanding the process that underlie the disparity in species richness across different taxonomic...
Fishes comprise a majority of living vertebrate species, with an extensive fossil record spanning mo...
The Actinopterygii (ray-finned fishes) is the largest and most diverse vertebrate group, but little ...
Fishes represent more than half of all living vertebrate species, but patterns of fish diversity rem...