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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Maize domestication and molecular evolution

Buckler, Edward St. Clair, January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Missouri-Columbia, 1997. / Typescript. Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
32

Maximum likelihood estimation of phylogenetic tree with evolutionary parameters

Wang, Qiang, January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2004. / Title from first page of PDF file. Document formatted into pages; contains xi, 167 p.; also includes graphics Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-167). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center
33

Transposons and the evolutionary relationships among modern rice species

Turcotte, Kime. January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
34

A phylogenetic study and taxonomic revision of the tribe Phisidini (Grylloptera:Tettigonioidea) /

Jin, Xing-Bao January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
35

Character variation and a cladistic analysis of the genus Lachenalia Jacq.f. ex Murray (Hyacinthaceae:Massonieae)

Duncan, Graham D. January 2005 (has links)
Morphological variation and a cladistic analysis of the large, endemic Southern African genus Lachenalia Jacq.f. ex Murray (Hyacinthaceae: Massonieae) is presented. Its close taxonomic relationship with the small endemic sympatric genus Polyxena Kunth (which has been included in the morphological and cladistic study) is discussed. The inclusion of Polyxena within Lachenalia is supported. One hundred and twenty species (139 taxa), comprising 115 Lachenalia and five Polyxena species are recognised. A wide range of morphological characters were analysed, including macromorphology, micromorphology, anatomy and palynology. A discussion and comparison of karyological data is also presented. A brief historical background, species diversity maps, figures, tables, appendices and illustrations of anatomical, micromorphological and macromorphological characters, and cladistic data, are presented, as well as discussions of pollination biology and phytogeography. This work is based on species studied in their natural habitats as well as under cultivation, and from representative herbarium specimens examined from BOL, NBG, PRE and SAM. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.
36

Fungal diversity from freshwater & riparian habitats and phylogeneticsof the Sordariales

Cai, Lei, 蔡磊 January 2006 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / Ecology and Biodiversity / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
37

A molecular systematic study of the African endemic cycads

16 August 2012 (has links)
M.Sc. / Africa's cycads (66 species and 2 subspecies in two endemic genera: Encephalartos and Stangeria) are extremely endangered with four species extinct in the wild and 80% threatened (CR, EN, or VU) with all included in CITES Appendix 1. Although South Africa has some of the world’s strictest cycad legislation, these plants are still under threat from illegal collection for horticulture and medicine especially where they are seized in an unidentifiable condition. Currently developed legislation demands accurate identification for permit issue. Ex situ conservation of genetic and locality based diversity is paramount. Furthermore, taxonomically many species of unknown origin are difficult to identify especially when diagnostic characters are absent. Species delimitation and numbers are uncertain with field observations often contradicting current understanding. DNA barcoding can assist with all the above-mentioned scenarios. In the current study all proposed DNA barcoding regions (matK, rbcLa, psbA-trnH, and nrITS) along with several additional regions were tested on ~350 samples from which a phylogeny of 63 of the 65 Encephalartos species was also constructed. Results show general good amplification and sequencing success of proposed barcoding regions, although a shift to specialist primers was made in several cases. Genetic variation however was extremely low as is resolution at species level, even when multi-locus barcodes were employed. Results obtained from the phylogenetic analyses show an increase in resolution at both species and higher levels compared to previous work and as such several new groupings are delimitated. Each species grouping is characterised by shared, derived morphological, ecological, and geographic characters and when compared to previous phylogenetic studies are supported to some extent. The current study provides the first step towards a much-needed monograph and revision of the entire genus Encephalartos.
38

Revisão taxonômica e análise cladística do gênero Odontopeltis Pocock, 1894 (Diplopoda, Polydesmida, Chelodesmidae) / Taxonomic review and cladistic analysis of the genus Odontopeltis Pocock, 1894 (Diplopoda; Polydesmida; Chelodesmidae)

Barbosa, João Paulo Peixoto Pena 27 June 2011 (has links)
Uma análise cladística baseada em parcimônia é utilizada para testar o monofiletismo do gênero Odontopeltis e suas relações com outras espécies de gêneros anteriormente relacionados. A matriz de dados compreende 15 terminais e 47 caracteres. A análise cladística com pesagem implícita de caracteres de concavidade igual a 2,012 resultou em uma árvore mais parcimoniosa com 99 passos (IC = 58; IR = 73). As seguintes sinapomorfias sustentam o clado Odontopeltis e são propostas como diagnoses para o gênero: (1) Formato do órgão de Tömösvary sub-oval; (2) borda do ozóporo simples; (3) dobras retrolaterais no acropódito; e (4) presença de um par de macro-cerdas delimitando o fim da região pré-femoral e o início da região femoral, no gonopódio. Para padronização das descrições de genitália, foi analisada toda a terminologia do gonopódio dos machos da família Chelodesmidae. O gonopódio dos machos é, então, formado por peças cujas homologias às peças das pernas é incerta: coxa, cânula, região pré-femoral, processo pré-femoral, região femoral e solenômero. Para o gênero Odontopeltis é proposta uma terminologia da genitália à parte, devido às modificações no gonopódio. O gênero é composto por 13 espécies, sendo oito espécies válidas e cinco insertis sedis, sendo elas: Odontopeltis conspersus, O. anchisteus, O. clarazianus, O. giganteus, O. sp. nov. 1, O. sp. nov. 2, O. sp. nov. 3 e O. sp. nov. 4, e as espécies insertis sedis são: O. próxima, O. gracilipes, O. decoloratus, O. borellii e O. balzanii. A tribo Macrocoxodesmini se mostrou parafilética e, portanto, foi desmembrada. A tribo Telonychopodini se manteve monofilética e o gênero Odontopeltis de fato não pertence a esta tribo. / A cladistic analysis based on parsimony is used to test the monophyly of the genus Odontopeltis and its relationship with related genera. The data matrix comprises 15 terminal taxa and 47 characters. The implied weighted analysis, with concavity 2,012, resulted in a 99 steps most parsimonious tree (CI = 58; RI = 73). The following sinapomorphies supports the clade Odontopeltis and are proposed as diagnosis characters for the genus: (1) Tömösvary organ sub-oval shaped; (2) ozopores edge simple; (3) retrolateral rims on acropodite; and (4) presence of macrobristles delimiting the end of the prefemoral region and the beginning of the femoral region, on the gonopods. To standardize the genitalia description, the terminology for the gonopods of the family Chelodesmidae was reviewed. Then, the male gonopods are composed by: coxae, cannula, prefemoral region, prefemoral process, femoral region and solenomere. There is no attempt to relate the homology of legs pieces with gonopod pieces. It\'s proposed a terminology for the gonopods of the genus Odontopeltis due to the modifications on the gonopods. The genus comprises 13 species, where eight are valid species and five are insertis sedis: Odontopeltis conspersus, O. anchisteus, O. clarazianus, O. giganteus, O. sp. nov. 1, O. sp. nov. 2, O. sp. nov. 3 and O. sp. nov. 4, and the insertis sedis species are: O. proxima, O. gracilipes, O. decoloratus, O. borellii and O. balzanii. The Macrocoxodesmini tribe showed as a paraphyletic group and, therefore, was dissolved. The Telonychopodini tribe is monophyletic and the genus Odontopeltis, indeed, do not belong to this tribe.
39

Cladistic analysis of juvenile and adult hominoid cranial shape variables / The role of ontogeny for reconstructing hominid phylogeny

Unknown Date (has links)
Phylogenies constructed from skeletal data often contradict those built from genetic data. This study evaluates the phylogenetic utility of adult male, female, and juvenile hominoid cranial bones. First, I used geometric morphometric methods to compare the cranial bone shapes of seven primate genera (Gorilla, Homo, Hylobates, Macaca, Nomascus, Pan, and Pongo). I then coded these shapes as continuous characters and constructed cladograms via parsimony analysis for the adult male, female, and juvenile character matrices. Finally, I evaluated the similarity of these cladograms to one another and to the genetic phylogeny using topological distance software. Cladograms did not differ from one another or the genetic phylogeny less than comparisons of randomly generated trees. These results suggest that cranial shapes are unlikely to provide accurate phylogenetic information, and agree with other analyses of skeletal data that fail to recover the molecular phylogeny (Collard & Wood, 2000, 2001; Springer et al., 2007). / by Thomas A. DiVito, II. / Title of the abstract: The role of ontogeny for reconstructing hominid phylogeny. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2011. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2011. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
40

História biogeográfica dos peixes da bacia amazônica: uma abordagem metodológica comparativa / Biogeographic history of the fishes from the Amazon Basin: a comparative methodological comparative approach

D'Agosta, Fernando Cesar Paiva 26 April 2016 (has links)
O presente estudo busca reunir todo o conhecimento disponível acerca da diversidade e distribuição dos peixes amazônicos. A ictiofauna amazônica é composta por 2441 espécies válidas, 527 gêneros, 55 famílias e 16 ordens. Esses números tornam o Amazonas, por ampla margem, a bacia hidrográfica mais rica em diversidade de peixes do planeta. A presente tese é dividida em quatro capítulos, cada um explorando um diferente aspecto da biogeografia dos peixes amazônicos. O primeiro capítulo aborda o assunto a partir de uma perspectiva histórica, desde sua fundação com Louis Agassiz na metade do século XIX até os dias atuais, abrangendo diversas escolas de pensamento. O segundo capítulo descreve a assembléia de peixes amazônicos, incluindo diversos testes estatísticos sobre a riqueza, composição taxonômica e a distribuição geográfica dos peixes da Amazônia. Um dos resultados é que a ictiofauna amazônica é composta em torno de 4,000 a 12,000 espécies. O terceiro capítulo descreve todos os padrões de distribuição presentes entre os peixes da Amazônia, sendo apresentados diversos exemplos e todos esses são discutidos dentro dos contextos temporal e geomorfológico. O último capítulo implementa análises biogeográficas quantitativas e as topologias resultantes formam a base conceitual para discussões sobre áreas de endemismo, sobre os problemas de faunas reticuladas histórica e cronologicamente e sobre a relação entre a filogenia e a biogeografia. / The present study is an effort to assemble all available knowledge about the diversity and the distribution of Amazonian fishes. The Amazonian ichthyofauna is composed of 2441 valid species, 527 genera, 55 families and 16 orders. These numbers make the Amazon, by a wide margin, the richest basin of the world in fish diversity. The present thesis is divided into four chapters, each one exploring a different aspect of the biogeography of Amazonian fishes. The first chapter addresses the subject from a historical perspective, from its foundation by Louis Agassiz in the middle of the nineteenth century to the present day, covering several schools of thought. The second chapter describes the Amazonian fish assemblage, including several statistical tests of hypotheses about the richness, taxonomic composition and geographic distribution of Amazonian fishes. One of the results is that the Amazonian ichthyofauna is composed of somewhere between 4,000 and 12,000 species. The third chapter describes every distribution pattern present in Amazonian fishes, with numerous examples of each, and discusses them in temporal and geomorphological contexts. The last chapter offers quantitative biogeographic analyzes, and the resulting topologies form the basis for conceptual discussions about the nature of areas of endemism, about the problems of historical reticulation and chronologically hybrid faunas, and on the relationship between phylogeny and biogeography.

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