An unprecedented amount of evidence now illuminates the phylogeny of living mammals and birds on the Tree of Life. We use this tree to measure phylogenetic value of data typically used in paleontology (bones and teeth) from six datasets derived from five published studies. We ask three interrelated questions: 1) Can these data adequately reconstruct known parts of the Tree of Life? 2) Is accuracy generally similar for studies using morphology, or do some morphological datasets perform better than others? 3) Does the loss of non-fossilizable data cause taxa to occur in misleadingly basal positions? Adding morphology to DNA datasets usually increases congruence of resulting topologies to the well corroborated tree, but this varies...
Analyses of morphological disparity can incorporate living and fossil taxa to facilitate the explora...
Phylogenies of mammals based on morphological data continue to show several major areas of conflict ...
Fossil taxa are critical to inferences of historical diversity and the origins of modern biodiversit...
Analyses of living and fossil taxa are crucial for understanding biodiversity through time. The tota...
Jointly developing a comprehensive tree of life from living and fossil taxa has long been a fundamen...
Fossils are the only remaining evidence of the majority of species that have ever existed, providing...
Fossils provide our only direct window into evolutionary events in the distant past. Incorporating t...
D ow nloaded from 2 Abstract.--- Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data th...
Abstract. — Systematists disagree whether data from fossils should be included in parsimony analyses...
The utility of fossils in evolutionary contexts is dependent on their accurate placement in phylogen...
Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data that have undergone decay and fossi...
Phylogenetic relationships are inferred principally from two classes of data: morphological and mole...
Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data that have undergone decay and fossi...
When building the tree of life, variability of phylogenetic signal is often accounted for by partiti...
Abstract.—Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data that have undergone decay...
Analyses of morphological disparity can incorporate living and fossil taxa to facilitate the explora...
Phylogenies of mammals based on morphological data continue to show several major areas of conflict ...
Fossil taxa are critical to inferences of historical diversity and the origins of modern biodiversit...
Analyses of living and fossil taxa are crucial for understanding biodiversity through time. The tota...
Jointly developing a comprehensive tree of life from living and fossil taxa has long been a fundamen...
Fossils are the only remaining evidence of the majority of species that have ever existed, providing...
Fossils provide our only direct window into evolutionary events in the distant past. Incorporating t...
D ow nloaded from 2 Abstract.--- Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data th...
Abstract. — Systematists disagree whether data from fossils should be included in parsimony analyses...
The utility of fossils in evolutionary contexts is dependent on their accurate placement in phylogen...
Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data that have undergone decay and fossi...
Phylogenetic relationships are inferred principally from two classes of data: morphological and mole...
Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data that have undergone decay and fossi...
When building the tree of life, variability of phylogenetic signal is often accounted for by partiti...
Abstract.—Paleontological systematics relies heavily on morphological data that have undergone decay...
Analyses of morphological disparity can incorporate living and fossil taxa to facilitate the explora...
Phylogenies of mammals based on morphological data continue to show several major areas of conflict ...
Fossil taxa are critical to inferences of historical diversity and the origins of modern biodiversit...