We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonization of novel environments that are the most likely to instigate adaptive evolution. One of the most extreme ecological transitions has been the shift in habitat associated with the move from water to land by amphibious fish. We provide the first phylogenetic investigation of these transitions for living fish. Thirty-three families have species reported to be amphibious and these are likely independent evolutionary origins of fish emerging onto land. Phylogenetic reconstructions of closely related taxa within one of these families, the Blenniidae, inferred as many as seven convergences on a highly amphibious lifestyle. Taken together, there ap...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
The colonisation of new environments is a central evolutionary process, yet why species make such tr...
The colonisation of new environments is a central evolutionary process, yet why species make such tr...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
Transitions between habitats driven by variation in physiological requirements at different stages o...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
The colonisation of new environments is a central evolutionary process, yet why species make such tr...
The colonisation of new environments is a central evolutionary process, yet why species make such tr...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
We know little about on how frequently transitions into new habitats occur, especially the colonizat...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
The invasion of a novel habitat often results in a variety of new selective pressures on an individu...
Transitions between habitats driven by variation in physiological requirements at different stages o...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
An ecological release from competition or predation is a frequent adaptive explanation for the colon...
The colonisation of new environments is a central evolutionary process, yet why species make such tr...
The colonisation of new environments is a central evolutionary process, yet why species make such tr...