In: Systematic Biology, 2009, vol. 58, no. 6, p. 612-628
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In: Annals of Botany, 2008, vol. 101, no. 7, p. 919-927
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In: Annals of Botany, 2011, vol. 107, no. 4, p. 699-707
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In: Annals of Botany, 2014, vol. 113, no. 5, p. 817-830
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In: Behavioral Ecology, 2007, vol. 19, no. 1, p. 177-183
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In: Systematic Biology, 2009, vol. 58, no. 1, p. 55-73
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In: New Phytologist, 2017, vol. 213, no. 1, p. 66–82
Recent decades have seen declines of entire plant clades while other clades persist despite changing environments. We suggest that one reason why some clades persist is that species within these clades use similar habitats, because such similarity may increase the degree of co-occurrence of species within clades. Traditionally, co- occurrence among clade members has been suggested to be...
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In: Molecular Ecology, 2013, vol. 22, no. 3, p. 842–855
Recent advances in population genomics have triggered great interest in the genomic landscape of divergence in taxa with ‘porous’ species boundaries. One important obstable of previous studies of this topic was the low genomic coverage achieved. This issue can now be overcome by the use of ‘next generation’ or short-read DNA-sequencing approaches capable of assaying many thousands of...
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In: Molecular Ecology, 2011, vol. 20, no. 15, p. 3185–3201
The roles of intra- and interspecific gene flow in speciation and species evolution are topics of great current interest in molecular ecology and evolutionary biology. Recent modelling studies call for new empirical data to test hypotheses arising from the recent shift from a ‘whole-genome reproductive isolation’ view to a ‘genic’ view of species and speciation. Particularly scarce (and...
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In: Molecular Ecology, 2010, vol. 19, no. 18, p. 3981–3994
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