All methods used in historical biogeographical analysis aim to obtain resolved area cladograms that represent historical relationships among areas in which monophyletic groups of taxa are distributed. When neither widespread nor sympatric taxa are present in the distribution of a monophyletic group, all methods obtain the same resolved area cladogram that conforms to a simple vicariance scenario. In most cases, however, the distribution of monophyletic groups of taxa is not that simple. A priori and a posteriori methods of historical biogeography differ in the way in which they deal with widespread and sympatric taxa. A posteriori methods are empirically superior to a priori methods, as they provide a more parsimonious accounting of the inp...
Aim Assess the value of parsimony analysis of endemism as either an a priori (cladistic) and an a po...
[EN] New solutions to old problems: widespread taxa, redundant distributions and missing areas in ev...
SYNOPSIS. Cladistic biogeographic methods remain susceptible to the confounding effects of ‘‘pseudo-...
All methods used in historical biogeographic analysis aim to obtain resolved area cladograms that re...
Abstract.—It is argued that inference procedures used in cladistic phylogenetics and in vicar-iance ...
Abstract.—This paper discusses some methodological problems associated with reconstructing the evolu...
A growing number of biogeographical methods have attempted to describe formal means of reconstructin...
Despite a number of advances in recent years, biogeography remains a field with a poorly developed p...
Cladistics has changed considerably with the availability of new methods and sources of data, and th...
Phylogenetic and phylogeographic approaches have become widespread in evolutionary biology, ecology,...
Testing hypotheses. A survey of the scientific discipline of biogeography Biogeography is the scient...
Abstract--Cladistics has changed considerably with the availability of new methods and sources of da...
Biogeography is the discipline of biology that studies the present and past distribution patterns o...
hypotheses. Syst. Zool. 24:407-430.—All biogeographical studies seem to pass through three main phas...
In historical biogeography, phylogenetic trees have long been used as tools for addressing a wide ra...
Aim Assess the value of parsimony analysis of endemism as either an a priori (cladistic) and an a po...
[EN] New solutions to old problems: widespread taxa, redundant distributions and missing areas in ev...
SYNOPSIS. Cladistic biogeographic methods remain susceptible to the confounding effects of ‘‘pseudo-...
All methods used in historical biogeographic analysis aim to obtain resolved area cladograms that re...
Abstract.—It is argued that inference procedures used in cladistic phylogenetics and in vicar-iance ...
Abstract.—This paper discusses some methodological problems associated with reconstructing the evolu...
A growing number of biogeographical methods have attempted to describe formal means of reconstructin...
Despite a number of advances in recent years, biogeography remains a field with a poorly developed p...
Cladistics has changed considerably with the availability of new methods and sources of data, and th...
Phylogenetic and phylogeographic approaches have become widespread in evolutionary biology, ecology,...
Testing hypotheses. A survey of the scientific discipline of biogeography Biogeography is the scient...
Abstract--Cladistics has changed considerably with the availability of new methods and sources of da...
Biogeography is the discipline of biology that studies the present and past distribution patterns o...
hypotheses. Syst. Zool. 24:407-430.—All biogeographical studies seem to pass through three main phas...
In historical biogeography, phylogenetic trees have long been used as tools for addressing a wide ra...
Aim Assess the value of parsimony analysis of endemism as either an a priori (cladistic) and an a po...
[EN] New solutions to old problems: widespread taxa, redundant distributions and missing areas in ev...
SYNOPSIS. Cladistic biogeographic methods remain susceptible to the confounding effects of ‘‘pseudo-...