All Stories

  1. 5S-IGS rDNA in wind-pollinated trees (Fagus L.) encapsulates 55 million years of reticulate evolution and hybrid origins of modern species
  2. High‐throughput sequencing of 5S‐IGS in oaks: Exploring intragenomic variation and algorithms to recognize target species in pure and mixed samples
  3. Evolutionary dynamics in the dispersal of sign languages
  4. Phylogenetic relationships in the southern African genusDrosanthemum(Ruschioideae, Aizoaceae)
  5. Plant fossils reveal major biomes occupied by the late Miocene Old-World Pikermian fauna
  6. Comparative systematics and phylogeography of Quercus Section Cerris in western Eurasia: inferences from plastid and nuclear DNA variation
  7. A Winteraceae pollen tetrad from the early Paleocene of western Greenland, and the fossil record of Winteraceae in Laurasia and Gondwana
  8. An updated infrageneric classification of the oaks: review of previous taxonomic schemes and synthesis of evolutionary patterns
  9. The fossil Osmundales (Royal Ferns)—a phylogenetic network analysis, revised taxonomy, and evolutionary classification of anatomically preserved trunks and rhizomes
  10. Eocene Loranthaceae pollen pushes back divergence ages for major splits in the family
  11. Evolution of pollen morphology in Loranthaceae
  12. Species relationships and divergence times in beeches: new insights from the inclusion of 53 young and old fossils in a birth–death clock model
  13. Intertwining phylogenetic trees and networks
  14. Fallacies and fantasies: the theoretical underpinnings of the Coexistence Approach for palaeoclimate reconstruction
  15. Plastome data reveal multiple geographic origins of Quercus Group Ilex
  16. Fallacies and fantasies: the theoretical underpinnings of the Coexistence Approach for palaeoclimate reconstruction
  17. Using more than the oldest fossils: Dating Osmundaceae by three Bayesian clock approaches
  18. On the systematic position of some Asian enigmatic genera of Asclepiadoideae (Apocynaceae)
  19. Diversity is inherently different between planktonic foraminiferal lineages
  20. Wax plants (Hoya, Apocynaceae) evolution: Epiphytism drives successful radiation
  21. From mesic to arid: Leaf epidermal features suggest preadaptation in Miocene dragon trees (Dracaena)
  22. Aponogeton pollen from the Cretaceous and Paleogene of North America and West Greenland: Implications for the origin and palaeobiogeography of the genus
  23. Evidence from "Köppen signatures" of fossil plant assemblages for effective heat transport of Gulf Stream to subarctic North Atlantic during Miocene cooling
  24. Constructing Phylogenies in the Presence Of Intra-Individual Site Polymorphisms (2ISPs) with a Focus on the Nuclear Ribosomal Cistron
  25. Effective heat transport of Gulf Stream to subarctic North Atlantic during Miocene cooling: evidence from "Köppen signatures" of fossil plant assemblages
  26. Supplementary material to "Effective heat transport of Gulf Stream to subarctic North Atlantic during Miocene cooling: evidence from "Köppen signatures" of fossil plant assemblages"
  27. Harvesting Betulaceae sequences from GenBank to generate a new chronogram for the family
  28. When field botany meets history: taxonomy of Platanus mexicana in Mexico
  29. When field botany meets history: taxonomy ofPlatanus mexicanain Mexico
  30. Reliability and resolution of the coexistence approach — A revalidation using modern-day data
  31. Genetic patterns in the Lathyrus pannonicus complex (Fabaceae) reflect ecological differentiation rather than biogeography and traditional subspecific division
  32. A Clustering Optimization Strategy for Molecular Taxonomy Applied to Planktonic Foraminifera SSU rDNA
  33. Maximum Likelihood Analyses of 3,490 rbcL Sequences: Scalability of Comprehensive Inference versus Group-Specific Taxon Sampling
  34. The biogeographic history of beech trees
  35. Relicts Within the Genus Complex Astragalus/Oxytropis (Fabaceae), and the Comparison of Diversity by Objective Means
  36. Monetianthus mirus gen. et sp. nov., a Nymphaealean Flower from the Early Cretaceous of Portugal
  37. Significance of Pollen Characteristics for Infrageneric Classification and Phylogeny in Quercus (Fagaceae)
  38. Geographical distribution of cryptic genetic types in the planktonic foraminiferGlobigerinoides ruber
  39. Ribosomal DNA shows extremely low genetic divergence in a world-wide distributed, but disjunct and highly adapted marine protozoan (Virgulinella fragilis, Foraminiferida)
  40. Rooting and Dating Maples (Acer) with an Uncorrelated-Rates Molecular Clock: Implications for North American/Asian Disjunctions
  41. Molecular evolution of 35S rDNA and taxonomic status of Lycopersicon within Solanum sect. Petota
  42. General functions to transform associate data to host data, and their use in phylogenetic inference from sequences with intra-individual variability
  43. ITS Evolution in Platanus (Platanaceae): Homoeologues, Pseudogenes and Ancient Hybridization
  44. Phase-contrast X-ray microtomography links Cretaceous seeds with Gnetales and Bennettitales
  45. THE EVOLUTION OF DIOECY, HETERODICHOGAMY, AND LABILE SEX EXPRESSION IN ACER
  46. Evolutionary history and systematics of Acer section Acer – a case study of low-level phylogenetics
  47. Coding of intraspecific nucleotide polymorphisms: A tool to resolve reticulate evolutionary relationships in the ITS of beech trees(FagusL., Fagaceae)
  48. Molecular and morphological incongruence in European species of Isothecium (Bryophyta)
  49. Diversity of rDNA in Chilostomella: Molecular differentiation patterns and putative hermit types
  50. Patterns of molecular and morphological differentiation in Fagus (Fagaceae): phylogenetic implications
  51. Phylogeny and biogeography of Zelkova (Ulmaceae sensu stricto) as inferred from leaf morphology, ITS sequence data and the fossil record
  52. The evolutionary history of Fagus in western Eurasia: Evidence from genes, morphology and the fossil record