The grandorder Glires, consisting of the orders Rodentia and Lagomorpha, encompasses a significant portion of the extant mammalian species including Rat, Mouse, Squirrel, Guinea pig and Beaver. Glires species play an important role in the ecosystem and provide valuable animal models for genetic studies and animal testing. Thus, it is important to reliably determine their evolutionary relationships and identify molecular characteristics that are specific for different species groups within the Glires. In this work, we have constructed a phylogenetic tree for >30 genome sequenced Glires species based on concatenated sequences of 25 conserved proteins. In this tree, members of different orders, suborders, and families within Glires formed stro...
The molecular relationship of placental mammals has attracted great interest in recent years. Howeve...
Although many mammalian mitogenomes have been sequenced, there are only three documented from the ro...
Background: Phylogenetic relationships between Lagomorpha, Rodentia and Primates and their allies (E...
The so-called Glires hypothesis postulates a sister-group relationship between Rodentia (e.g., rat a...
Rodentia is the largest order of placental mammals, with approximately 2,050 species divided into 28...
Rodentia is the largest order of placental mammals, with approximately 2,050 species divided into 28...
Background. Rodentia is the most diverse order of placental mammals, with extant rodent species repr...
Background. Rodentia is the most diverse order of placental mammals, with extant rodent species repr...
The phylogenetic relationships among the Gliridae (order Rodentia) were assessed using 3430 nucleoti...
One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylogeograph...
One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylogeograph...
<div><p>One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylo...
Program year: 1992/1993Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe order Rodentia contains two su...
One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylogeograph...
Background: Phylogenetic relationships between Lagomorpha, Rodentia and Primates and their allies (E...
The molecular relationship of placental mammals has attracted great interest in recent years. Howeve...
Although many mammalian mitogenomes have been sequenced, there are only three documented from the ro...
Background: Phylogenetic relationships between Lagomorpha, Rodentia and Primates and their allies (E...
The so-called Glires hypothesis postulates a sister-group relationship between Rodentia (e.g., rat a...
Rodentia is the largest order of placental mammals, with approximately 2,050 species divided into 28...
Rodentia is the largest order of placental mammals, with approximately 2,050 species divided into 28...
Background. Rodentia is the most diverse order of placental mammals, with extant rodent species repr...
Background. Rodentia is the most diverse order of placental mammals, with extant rodent species repr...
The phylogenetic relationships among the Gliridae (order Rodentia) were assessed using 3430 nucleoti...
One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylogeograph...
One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylogeograph...
<div><p>One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylo...
Program year: 1992/1993Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe order Rodentia contains two su...
One of the major challenges in the analysis of closely related species, speciation and phylogeograph...
Background: Phylogenetic relationships between Lagomorpha, Rodentia and Primates and their allies (E...
The molecular relationship of placental mammals has attracted great interest in recent years. Howeve...
Although many mammalian mitogenomes have been sequenced, there are only three documented from the ro...
Background: Phylogenetic relationships between Lagomorpha, Rodentia and Primates and their allies (E...