Abstract Background The evolutionary relationships of closely related species have long been of interest to biologists since these species experienced different evolutionary processes in a relatively short period of time. Comparison of phylogenies inferred from DNA sequences with differing inheritance patterns, such as mitochondrial, autosomal, and X and Y chromosomal loci, can provide more comprehensive inferences of the evolutionary histories of species. Gibbons, especially the genus Hylobates, are particularly intriguing as they consist of multiple closely related species which emerged rapidly and live in close geographic proximity. Our current understanding of relationships among Hylobates species is largely based on data from the mater...
Genome size was measured as the amount of Feulgen-stained DNA in six species of the family Hylobatid...
Gibbon species have accumulated an unusually high number of chromosomal changes since diverging from...
Gibbons are small arboreal apes that display an accelerated rate of evolutionary chromosomal rearran...
BACKGROUND: Uniquely among hominoids, gibbons exist as multiple geographically contiguous taxa exhib...
Gibbons are believed to have diverged from the larger great apes ∼16.8 MYA and today reside in the r...
The Hylobatidae (gibbons) are among the most endangered primates and their evolutionary history and ...
Family Hylobatidae which includes gibbons and tiny apes, is the sister group to the Family Hominida...
Obwohl die Phylogenie und Phylogeographie von Gibbons (Hylobatidae), eine in Südost-Asi...
In this study we characterized the extension, reciprocal arrangement, and orientation of syntenic ch...
Because the fossil history of gib-bons is virtually unknown,1,2 gibbon evolution can only be reconst...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
Gibbons are small, arboreal, highly endangered apes that are understudied compared with other homino...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
The distribution of genetic diversity in great-ape species is likely to have been affected by patter...
Genome size was measured as the amount of Feulgen-stained DNA in six species of the family Hylobatid...
Gibbon species have accumulated an unusually high number of chromosomal changes since diverging from...
Gibbons are small arboreal apes that display an accelerated rate of evolutionary chromosomal rearran...
BACKGROUND: Uniquely among hominoids, gibbons exist as multiple geographically contiguous taxa exhib...
Gibbons are believed to have diverged from the larger great apes ∼16.8 MYA and today reside in the r...
The Hylobatidae (gibbons) are among the most endangered primates and their evolutionary history and ...
Family Hylobatidae which includes gibbons and tiny apes, is the sister group to the Family Hominida...
Obwohl die Phylogenie und Phylogeographie von Gibbons (Hylobatidae), eine in Südost-Asi...
In this study we characterized the extension, reciprocal arrangement, and orientation of syntenic ch...
Because the fossil history of gib-bons is virtually unknown,1,2 gibbon evolution can only be reconst...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
Gibbons are small, arboreal, highly endangered apes that are understudied compared with other homino...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
We sequenced reduced representation libraries by means of Illumina technology to generate over 1.5 M...
The distribution of genetic diversity in great-ape species is likely to have been affected by patter...
Genome size was measured as the amount of Feulgen-stained DNA in six species of the family Hylobatid...
Gibbon species have accumulated an unusually high number of chromosomal changes since diverging from...
Gibbons are small arboreal apes that display an accelerated rate of evolutionary chromosomal rearran...