Geographic isolation of sister taxa in the African and Asian tropics (palaeotropical intercontinental disjunction; PID) is a major biogeographic pattern explained by four competing hypotheses: rafting on the Indian tectonic plate (‘Gondwanan vicariance hypothesis’); migration facilitated by a northern mid-latitude corridor of frost-free climates during the Eocene (‘boreotropical migration hypothesis’); overland dispersal across Arabia associated with the Miocene Climatic Optimum; and transoceanic dispersal. The explanatory challenges posed by PIDs are addressed here using the pantropical flowering plant family Annonaceae as a study system. Molecular dating and ancestral area reconstructions were undertaken using plastid DNA sequence data (c...
Background Tropical rain forests are the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems on the planet. How this...
Oceans, or other wide expanses of inhospitable environment, interrupt present day distributions of m...
Disjunct distribution patterns in plant lineages are usually explained according to three hypotheses...
Geographic isolation of sister taxa in the African and Asian tropics (palaeotropical intercontinenta...
Geographic isolation of sister taxa in the African and Asian tropics (palaeotropical intercontinenta...
Geographic isolation of sister taxa in the African and Asian tropics (palaeotropical intercontinenta...
Theme: New Frontiers in BotanySession: SY04 - Annonaceae evolution: integrating molecules, biogeogra...
Aim : Rain forest-restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major trop...
Aim Rain forest-restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major tropic...
Aim Rain forest-restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major tropic...
Abstract Background The Asimina-Disepalum clade (Annonaceae subfam. Annonoideae tribe Annoneae) incl...
Aim Rain forest?restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major tropic...
Oral Session: Secondary forestsStudies of tropical intercontinental disjunctions, common biogeograph...
Background - Tropical rain forests are the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems on the planet. How th...
The rate and direction of biotic exchange between the palaeotropical arid floras of Asia, Africa and...
Background Tropical rain forests are the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems on the planet. How this...
Oceans, or other wide expanses of inhospitable environment, interrupt present day distributions of m...
Disjunct distribution patterns in plant lineages are usually explained according to three hypotheses...
Geographic isolation of sister taxa in the African and Asian tropics (palaeotropical intercontinenta...
Geographic isolation of sister taxa in the African and Asian tropics (palaeotropical intercontinenta...
Geographic isolation of sister taxa in the African and Asian tropics (palaeotropical intercontinenta...
Theme: New Frontiers in BotanySession: SY04 - Annonaceae evolution: integrating molecules, biogeogra...
Aim : Rain forest-restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major trop...
Aim Rain forest-restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major tropic...
Aim Rain forest-restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major tropic...
Abstract Background The Asimina-Disepalum clade (Annonaceae subfam. Annonoideae tribe Annoneae) incl...
Aim Rain forest?restricted plant families show disjunct distributions between the three major tropic...
Oral Session: Secondary forestsStudies of tropical intercontinental disjunctions, common biogeograph...
Background - Tropical rain forests are the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems on the planet. How th...
The rate and direction of biotic exchange between the palaeotropical arid floras of Asia, Africa and...
Background Tropical rain forests are the most diverse terrestrial ecosystems on the planet. How this...
Oceans, or other wide expanses of inhospitable environment, interrupt present day distributions of m...
Disjunct distribution patterns in plant lineages are usually explained according to three hypotheses...