New uses for new phylogenies

What this book is about new phylogenies - an introductory look at the coalescent genealogies and geography the coalescent process and background selection inferring population history from molecular phylogenies applications of intraspecific phylogenetics inferring phylogenies from DNA sequence data - the effects of sampling uses for evolutionary trees cross-species transmission and recombination of AIDS viruses using interspecies phylogenies to test macroevolutionary hypotheses using phylogenetic trees to reconstruct the history of infectious disease epidemics relating geographic patterns to phylogenetic processes uses of molecular phylogenies for conservation testing the time axis of phylogenies comparative evolution of larval and adult life-history stages and small subunit ribosomal RNA amongst post-Palaeozoic echinoids molecular phylogenies and host-parasite cospeciation - gophers and lice as a model system a microevolutionary link, between phylogenies and comparative data comparative test of evolutionary lability and rats using molecular phylogenies community evolution in Greater Antilean anolis lizards - phylogenetic patterns and experimental tests the evolution of body plans: HOM/HOX cluster evolution, model systems, and the importance of phylogeny.

[1]  P H Harvey,et al.  Tempo and mode of evolution revealed from molecular phylogenies. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[2]  Joseph B. Slowinski,et al.  Testing the Stochasticity of Patterns of Organismal Diversity: An Improved Null Model , 1989, The American Naturalist.

[3]  C. Guyer,et al.  COMPARISONS OF OBSERVED PHYLOGENETIC TOPOLOGIES WITH NULL EXPECTATIONS AMONG THREE MONOPHYLETIC LINEAGES , 1991, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.

[4]  J. Felsenstein Phylogenies and the Comparative Method , 1985, The American Naturalist.