All Stories

  1. Further analysis of 1532 deciduous woody species from North America, Europe, and Asia supports continental‐scale differences in red autumn colouration
  2. Origin and domestication of Cucurbitaceae crops:insights from phylogenies, genomics and archaeology
  3. Why does North America have a redder fall than Europe and Asia?
  4. Increased autumn productivity permits temperate trees to compensate for spring frost damage
  5. A Winteraceae pollen tetrad from the early Paleocene of western Greenland, and the fossil record of Winteraceae in Laurasia and Gondwana
  6. Jan Vilém Helfer's (1810–1840) collections from India, the Andaman Archipelago and Burma
  7. The evolutionary biology of floral mimicry
  8. The sex chromosomes of bryophytes: Recent insights, open questions, and reinvestigations of Frullania dilatata and Plagiochila asplenioides
  9. Spring predictability explains different leaf-out strategies in the woody floras of North America, Europe and East Asia
  10. How Two Oil-Bee Species, Centris and Epicharis, Evolved to Become More or Less Specialized
  11. Diversity and clade ages of West Indian hummingbirds and the largest plant clades dependent on them: a 5-9 Myr young mutualistic system
  12. Escape from extreme specialization: passionflowers, bats and the sword-billed hummingbird