ReviewEvolutionary trees underpin virtually all of biology, and the wealth of new genomic data has enabled us to reconstruct them with increasing detail and confidence. While phenotypic (typically morphological) traits are becoming less important in reconstructing evolutionary trees, they still serve vital and unique roles in phylogenetics, even for living taxa for which vast amounts of genetic information are available. Morphology remains a powerful independent source of evidence for testing molecular clades, and - through fossil phenotypes - the primary means for time-scaling phylogenies. Morphological phylogenetics is therefore vital for transforming undated molecular topologies into dated evolutionary trees. However, if morphology is to...
Abstract—The capability to conduct Maximum Likelihood based phylogenetic (evolutionary) analyses on ...
Evolutionary inferences require reliable phylogenies. Morphological data has traditionally been anal...
A recent article by Scotland et al. (2003; hereafter referred to as SEA) purporting to examine the v...
Evolutionary trees underpin virtually all of biology, and the wealth of new genomic data has enabled...
Morphology has traditionally played a pivotal role in animal phylogeny since the first evolutionary ...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
Animal phylogenies have been traditionally inferred by using the character state information derived...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
Morphology, the description and analysis of organismal form, is one of the oldest biological discipl...
Since Willi Hennig laid the foundations of phylogenetic systematics in 1950, this field has undergon...
© 2009 European Society for Evolutionary BiologyThe emerging molecular evolutionary tree for placent...
Evolutionary developmental genetics brings together systematists, morphologists and developmental ge...
The utility of morphological and molecular data in phylogenetic inference has been widely debated. P...
A major challenge in the post-genomics era will be to integrate molecular sequence data from extant ...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Abstract—The capability to conduct Maximum Likelihood based phylogenetic (evolutionary) analyses on ...
Evolutionary inferences require reliable phylogenies. Morphological data has traditionally been anal...
A recent article by Scotland et al. (2003; hereafter referred to as SEA) purporting to examine the v...
Evolutionary trees underpin virtually all of biology, and the wealth of new genomic data has enabled...
Morphology has traditionally played a pivotal role in animal phylogeny since the first evolutionary ...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
Animal phylogenies have been traditionally inferred by using the character state information derived...
We live in the age of comparative genomics, and it may seem that there is not much point in reconstr...
Morphology, the description and analysis of organismal form, is one of the oldest biological discipl...
Since Willi Hennig laid the foundations of phylogenetic systematics in 1950, this field has undergon...
© 2009 European Society for Evolutionary BiologyThe emerging molecular evolutionary tree for placent...
Evolutionary developmental genetics brings together systematists, morphologists and developmental ge...
The utility of morphological and molecular data in phylogenetic inference has been widely debated. P...
A major challenge in the post-genomics era will be to integrate molecular sequence data from extant ...
Morphology-based phylogenetic analyses are the only option for reconstructing relationships among ex...
Abstract—The capability to conduct Maximum Likelihood based phylogenetic (evolutionary) analyses on ...
Evolutionary inferences require reliable phylogenies. Morphological data has traditionally been anal...
A recent article by Scotland et al. (2003; hereafter referred to as SEA) purporting to examine the v...