15 results match your criteria: "3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria[Affiliation]"

The massive increase in the amount of plastid genome data have allowed researchers to address a variety of evolutionary questions within a wide range of plant groups. While plastome structure is generally conserved, some angiosperm lineages exhibit structural changes. Such is the case of the megadiverse order Asterales, where rearrangements in plastome structure have been documented.

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Flowers are the complex and highly diverse reproductive structures of angiosperms. Because of their role in sexual reproduction, the evolution of flowers is tightly linked to angiosperm speciation and diversification. Accordingly, the quantification of floral morphological diversity (disparity) among angiosperm subgroups and through time may give important insights into the evolutionary history of angiosperms as a whole.

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Fossils are essential to infer past evolutionary processes. The assignment of fossils to extant clades has traditionally relied on morphological similarity and on apomorphies shared with extant taxa. The use of explicit phylogenetic analyses to establish fossil affinities has so far remained limited.

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Anchored Hybrid Enrichment (AHE) is a tool for capturing orthologous regions of the nuclear genome shared in low or single copy across lineages. Despite the increasing number of studies using this method, its usefulness to estimate relationships at deeper taxonomic levels in plants has not been fully explored. Here we present a proof of concept about the performance of nuclear loci obtained with AHE to infer phylogenetic relationships and explore the use of gene sampling schemes to estimate divergence times in Asterales.

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The timing of Malvales evolution: Incorporating its extensive fossil record to inform about lineage diversification.

Mol Phylogenet Evol

November 2019

Departamento de Botánica, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria, Del. Coyoacán, Ciudad de México 04510, Mexico. Electronic address:

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Splitting : morphological and molecular evidence support the recognition of as a distinct genus in the Cacteae.

PhytoKeys

November 2018

Laboratorio de Genética Molecular y Ecología Evolutiva, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro, Campus Aeropuerto, Querétaro, Querétaro 76140, México Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro Querétaro Mexico.

Molecular phylogenetic studies of the six currently accepted species in the genus have partially clarified certain aspects of its phylogeny. Most of the studies lack a complete sampling of and are based only in one source of data. Phylogenetic uncertainties in , such as the recognition of as a different genus from , the exclusion of or the affinities of , are here resolved.

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Thirty clues to the exceptional diversification of flowering plants.

Ann Bot

February 2019

Departamento de Botánica, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria, Del. Coyoacán, Ciudad de México, México.

Background And Aims: As angiosperms became one of the megadiverse groups of macroscopic eukaryotes, they forged modern ecosystems and promoted the evolution of extant terrestrial biota. Unequal distribution of species among lineages suggests that diversification, the process that ultimately determines species richness, acted differentially through angiosperm evolution.

Methods: We investigate how angiosperms became megadiverse by identifying the phylogenetic and temporal placement of exceptional radiations, by combining the most densely fossil-calibrated molecular clock phylogeny with a Bayesian model that identifies diversification shifts among evolutionary lineages and through time.

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Uncovering Higher-Taxon Diversification Dynamics from Clade Age and Species-Richness Data.

Syst Biol

May 2017

Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria, Coyoacán, Ciudad de México 04510, México.

The relationship between clade age and species richness has been increasingly used in macroevolutionary studies as evidence for ecologically versus time-dependent diversification processes. However, theory suggests that phylogenetic structure, age type (crown or stem age), and taxonomic delimitation can affect estimates of the age-richness correlation (ARC) considerably. We currently lack an integrative understanding of how these different factors affect ARCs, which in turn, obscures further interpretations.

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Apparent similarity, underlying homoplasy: Morphology and molecular phylogeny of the North American clade of Manihot.

Am J Bot

April 2015

Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria s/n, Del. Coyoacán, México D.F. 04510 Mexico.

Premise Of The Study: Morphologically diverse clades are useful for detecting adaptive morphological evolution. Each of their variants may have evolved once or several times, suggesting that their repeated appearance may be due to environmental pressures. The North American Manihot species are an excellent system to detect possible adaptations and to assess the effect of mono- or polyphyly on classification.

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Beyond aridification: multiple explanations for the elevated diversification of cacti in the New World Succulent Biome.

New Phytol

June 2014

Departamento de Botánica, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria, Del. Coyoacán, México D.F, 04510, México.

Succulent plants are widely distributed, reaching their highest diversity in arid and semi-arid regions. Their origin and diversification is thought to be associated with a global expansion of aridity. We test this hypothesis by investigating the tempo and pattern of Cactaceae diversification.

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Premise Of The Study: Land plants play an essential role in the evolution of terrestrial life. Their time of origin and diversification is fundamental to understanding the evolution of life on land. We investigated the timing and the rate of molecular evolution of land plants, evaluating the effects of different types of molecular data, including temporal information from fossils, and using different molecular clock methods.

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Phylogenetic relationships and evolution of growth form in Cactaceae (Caryophyllales, Eudicotyledoneae).

Am J Bot

January 2011

Departamento de Botánica, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria, Del. Coyoacán, México D.F. 04510 México.

Premise Of The Study: Cactaceae is one of the most charismatic plant families because of the extreme succulence and outstanding diversity of growth forms of its members. Although cacti are conspicuous elements of arid ecosystems in the New World and are model systems for ecological and anatomical studies, the high morphological convergence and scarcity of phenotypic synapomorphies make the evolutionary relationships and trends among lineages difficult to understand.

Methods: We performed phylogenetic analyses implementing parsimony ratchet and likelihood methods, using a concatenated matrix with 6148 bp of plastid and nuclear markers (trnK/matK, matK, trnL-trnF, rpl16, and ppc).

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Using fossils to break long branches in molecular dating: a comparison of relaxed clocks applied to the origin of angiosperms.

Syst Biol

July 2010

Departamento de Botánica, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria, Del. Coyoacán, México D.F. 04510, México.

Long branches are potentially problematic in molecular dating because they can encompass a vast number of combinations of substitution rate and time. A long branch is suspected to have biased molecular clock estimates of the age of flowering plants (angiosperms) to be much older than their earliest fossils. This study explores the effect of the long branch subtending angiosperms in molecular dating and how different relaxed clocks react to it.

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Angiosperm diversification through time.

Am J Bot

January 2009

Departamento de Botánica, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito de Ciudad Universitaria, Del. Coyoacán, México D.F. 04510 Mexico.

The extraordinary diversity of angiosperms is the ultimate outcome of the interplay of speciation and extinction, which determine the net diversification of different lineages. We document the temporal trends of angiosperm diversification rates during their early history. Absolute diversification rates were estimated for order-level clades using ages derived from relaxed molecular clock analyses that included or excluded a maximal constraint to angiosperm age.

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